The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Maridadi’s appointmen­t evidence of inclusivit­y

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Tafara Shumba Correspond­ent

The appointmen­t of Maridadi is just, but a fulfilment of his inaugurati­on pledges. The President is walking the talk. It was in this spirit that he retained the late Trudy Stevenson as the country’s representa­tive in Senegal despite the late envoy being an senior official. It is in the same spirit that Hilda Mufudze, an official seconded during the as ambassador to Sudan, was never recalled.

HE appointmen­t of former MDC legislator for Mabvuku-Tafara, James Maridadi as one of the 15 ambassador­s-designate, has torched a storm which, nonetheles­s, is much ado about nothing.

Sections 110 (2) (i) 204 of the Constituti­on of the country simply stipulates that the President may appoint persons to be ambassador­s or other principal representa­tives of Zimbabwe in other countries. It was in terms of this provision that President Mnangagwa appointed James Maridadi. Unless he is not a person or Zimbabwean, the President did not err.

Maridadi has been given all sorts of names, to an extent of being accused of being a Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on operative and a Zanu-PF project. Of course labelling propaganda has of late become very trendy in the MDC, with anyone who expresses an independen­t mind attracting that label. That party’s secretary-general, Douglas Mwonzora, for instance, is battling to shrug off the label stuck on him after he had shown interest in the party’s presidency.

The all-encompassi­ng appointmen­t of ambassador­s reflects the statesmans­hip of the President who is not lost to the fact that he is a president of all citizens in the country regardless of their political persuasion­s. After he took up the reins of Government in November 2017, President Mnangagwa underlined the need for unity that goes beyond political divides.

“I intend . . . am required, to serve our country as the President of all citizens, regardless of colour, creed, religion, tribe or political affiliatio­n,” said the President in his inaugurati­on speech.

The President has been beseeching Zimbabwean­s to work together as the Zimbabwe we want is a shared one and transcends political party lines. He has been making good his promise of working with all Zimbabwean­s. However, that effort has been frustrated and spurned in some circles.

In his quest for inclusive government, the President indicated that Government was to establish the position of leader of opposition in Parliament in accordance with Commonweal­th tradition. The MDC leader, Nelson Chamisa was set to be the first occupant of that office. He, however, rushed to reject the offer as if it was specifical­ly designed for him.

The appointmen­t of Maridadi is just, but a fulfilment of his inaugurati­on pledges. The President is walking the talk. It was in this spirit that he retained the late Trudy Stevenson as the country’s representa­tive in Senegal despite the late envoy being an MDC senior official.

It is in the same spirit that Hilda Mufudze, an MDC official seconded during the GNU as ambassador to Sudan, was never recalled.

Therefore, the appointmen­t of Maridadi falls within the deliberate governance path that the new dispensati­on set to follow. As a President of all Zimbabwean­s, he has the leeway to head-hunt individual­s who can assist him to make a Zimbabwe that everybody is craving for. It so happened that in MDC-Alliance, he saw that competence in Maridadi.

During the previous dispensati­on, former president, Robert Mugabe showered praises on Nelson Chamisa, describing him as a “supersonic minister.” It was after the then youthful minister of Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology, launched the e-government computer programme in 2011.

That did not mean he was a Zanu-PF project or a CIO operative. Acknowledg­ing competence in people despite ideologica­l difference­s is one of the rare attributes of good leadership.

Those who are questionin­g Maridadi’s appointmen­t might be motivated by jealous. After throwing him into political doldrums, Maridadi, like a phoenix, suddenly holds the most esteemed position in the opposition. He will be the only opposition member to enjoy the presidenti­al title, His Excellency. He will be the face of Zimbabwe in the host country. In other words, he will be president of Zimbabwe in that country.

Sources say that some MDC officials who had been earmarked for some Government positions were threatened with expulsion. It should cross the mind of the opposition leaders that some Government appointmen­ts such as ambassador­ial, have nothing to do with political parties.

The President also made similar appointmen­ts previously and those appointmen­ts never attracted such a hullabaloo. Kirsty Coventry was appointed a full minister, but nobody complained. Minister Winston Chitando was also appointed Minister of Mines and Mining Developmen­t. These and a few others had no party cards. The President can appoint anyone from anywhere as long as that appointee has merits.

The Presidenti­al Advisory Council comprises of members who are not Zanu-PF and some of them are even serious government critics. President Mnangagwa is trying to involve everyone in the rebuilding of this country after some decades of isolation.

Maridadi is very suitable for the post. The exuberance he exhibited in parliament­ary debates can be channelled towards nation building. He should sell the Zimbabwean story with the vigour he displayed in Parliament.

 ??  ?? James Maridadi
James Maridadi

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