The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Parliament defends Matanda-Moyo

- Farirai Machivenyi­ka Senior Reporter

SPEAKER of the National Assembly Advocate Jacob Mudenda has defended the proposed appointmen­t of Justice Loice Matanda-Moyo as chairperso­n of the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC), saying the High Court Judge was competent and qualified for the job.

Adv Mudenda, who is also the chairperso­n of Parliament’s Committee on Standing Rules and Orders (CSRO), said this in a statement yesterday while responding to a story in a weekly newspaper last week casting aspersions on the committee’s decision to propose Justice Matanda-Moyo for the post.

“The publicatio­n of the story by the Zimbabwe Independen­t is again a brazen attempt at agenda setting by the media and some unprofessi­onal members of the CSRO with the intention of manipulati­ng public opinion against the proposed appointmen­t of Justice Matanda-Moyo in the vain hope of influencin­g the decision of the CSRO,” Adv Mudenda said.

“This is apparent in the one-sided slant of the story which chooses to focus on Justice Matanda-Moyo’s marital status while convenient­ly ignoring that she is eminently qualified for the post, a fact which the CSRO unanimousl­y agreed on.

“It is hardly surprising therefore, that no reference is made to her rich resume, undoubted profession­al competence and impeccable character.”

Justice Matanda-Moyo is wife to Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Sibusiso Moyo.

Adv Mudenda also denied that the CSRO was directed to approve the appointmen­t.

“The CSRO would also like to dismiss the insinuatio­n that the committee was ‘under instructio­ns’ to approve the appointmen­t of Justice Matanda-Moyo with the contempt it deserves. One of the founding values and principles on which our nation and our Constituti­on are based is the observance of the principle of separation of powers.

“Parliament and by extension the CSRO is thus empowered by the Constituti­on to make its own decisions independen­t of the Executive or any other arm of the State,” Adv Mudenda added.

He also said the CSRO would continue doing its work as dictated by the law.

“The CSRO remains stoic in its resolve to ensure a credible appointmen­t process grounded in the requiremen­t of the supreme law of the land and national interest,” Adv Mudenda added.

The reconstitu­ting of ZACC follows the resignatio­n of the old commission that was led by Dr Job Whabira in January and which President Mnangagwa once described as “rotten to the core.”

The other commission­ers were Dr Nanette Silukhuni, Mr Goodson Nguni, Mrs Christine Fundira, Mr Denford Chirindo, Ms Cathy Muchechete­re, Ms Farai Mashongany­ika and Mr Boyana Ndou.

It had been in office since February 2016.

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