NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Khupe Parly return hits snag

- BY DESMOND CHINGARAND­E

MDC-T interim leader Thokozani Khupe and her 14 party nominees’ march to Parliament, where they are set to replace recalled MDC Alliance MPs, is now hanging in the balance following an urgent court applicatio­n to stop the process.

Khupe and her acolytes were likely to be sworn in today after the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) last Friday confirmed the filling of 15 seats by her party nominees, where she was also set to become the leader of the opposition in the National Assembly.

The Zec notice came despite the electoral body sitting on over 10 000 objections to General Notice 2078/2020

of July informing the public that it had received notice from Parliament of 15 PR seat vacancies, according voters 14 days to object.

But a voter, Charles Madhiwa of Mbizo, Kwekwe, yesterday approached the High Court, seeking to stop the swearing in ceremony.

He is seeking an order to stop Khupe and her acolytes from taking oath as Members of Parliament.

“Respondent­s shall not administer or cause the sixth to 20th respondent­s to take an oath of office as a Member of Parliament nor occupy nor allow being occupied any seat in Parliament on the basis of GN 2553 of 2020 or of any appointmen­t declared therein.”

The respondent­s are yet to respond to the applicatio­n.

Madhiwa cited Speaker of Parliament Jacob Mudenda, Zec, it's chairperso­n Priscilla Chigumba, Clerk of Parliament Kennedy Chokuda, Senate president Mabel Chinomona as well as Khupe and her chosen parliament­ary candidates as respondent­s.

Madhiwa submitted that General Notice 2553 of 2020 was not consistent with section 157 of the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe in that MDC-T nominees could not replace another party’s members.

“The Government Notice 2553 of 2020 is declared to be inconsiste­nt with section 157(1)(9d) of the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe, in that it purported to award seats in Parliament said to be vacant to the sixth to twentieth respondent­s as nominees of MDC-T without ensuring that those nominated by MDC-T and appointed by Zec were members of another political party MDC Alliance, whose members had won and held those seats; and accordingl­y that Government Notice 2553 of 2020 and all appointmen­ts announced therein are null, void and of no legal force or effect,” Madhiwa submitted.

“I am filing this applicatio­n as a matter of principle in an effort to stop people from one distinct political party being sworn in as Members of Parliament to fill seats won and previously held by members of another distinct political party, without any election.”

He said if this undemocrat­ic and unconstitu­tional practice proceeded, it would be clearly violating the Constituti­on and would also alter the results of the 2018 harmonised election.

“If allowed, it will also alter the election results announced in 2018 by Zec and the chairperso­n, although under our law, changing an election result can only be done by a court ruling on an election petition, neither of which has occurred here,” he submitted.

“Zec has in effect usurped the role of the courts and purported to alter Zimbabwe’s 2018 parliament­ary election results as proclaimed by itself.

“It will alter our Parliament’s compositio­n in a way that is not, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, based on the will of the people as expressed at the last general elections held in July 2018.”

Madhiwa said during the 2018 general elections, all voters and respondent­s, including Zec and Chigumba, recognised MDC-T and the MDC Alliance as separate opposition parties, irrespecti­ve of their legal nature.

He submitted that no party took part in the elections as MDC or Movement for Democratic Change.

He added that the MDC-T and MDC Alliance each fielded their own candidates in those 2018 elections in competitio­n with each other and with other parties and independen­t candidates.

“I note that Khupe stood for president, while Yvonne Musarurwa, Lwazi Sibanda, Dorothy Molly Ndhlovu, Khalipani Phugeni, Tamani Moyo and Chief Ndhlovu all stood for seats in Parliament, all saying they were sponsored by MDC-T, and all unsuccessf­ul,” Madhiwa submitted.

“Piniel Denga and Teti Chisoroche­ngwe also stood unsuccessf­ully for Parliament in 2018, at the time being sponsored by MDC Alliance, but later left that political party and joined its rival MDC-T, as of course they are entitled to do.”

 ?? Pic: Shepherd Tozvireva ?? Commuters get drenched in rain as they shove to find transport home at Market Square bus terminus in Harare on Monday. The afternoon rains caught many unawares.
Pic: Shepherd Tozvireva Commuters get drenched in rain as they shove to find transport home at Market Square bus terminus in Harare on Monday. The afternoon rains caught many unawares.
 ??  ?? Thokozani Khupe
Thokozani Khupe

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