NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Former Chief Ndiweni protests ED presence at COP26

- BY SILAS NKALA ● Follow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

DETHRONED Ntabazindu­na chief Nhlanhlaya­mangwe Ndiweni on Thursday last week led a group of demonstrat­ors to the Zimbabwean embassy in the United Kingdom (UK) calling for President Emmerson Mnangagwa to be barred from participat­ing at the Climate Change Conference (COP26).

COP26 will be held next month on November 23 and 24 in Glasgow, Scotland, and Mnangagwa has been invited to attend.

But last Thursday, Ndiweni led a group of demonstrat­ors at the Zimbabwean embassy in the UK, who later handed over a petition to UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Ndiweni told the protesters that climate change issues in Zimbabwe could only be dealt with effectivel­y by a government that respects the rule of law.

“Climate change requires a government that has rule of law, a government underpinne­d by democracy. In Zimbabwe, we do not have that. Therefore, it is exceedingl­y unlikely that the government of Zimbabwe can effect and facilitate what is required by the climate change conference,” Ndiweni said.

“The meeting requires honesty and some form of legitimacy, but currently in Zimbabwe, we do not have that. So we are raising our voice in a democratic country here in England to say that the presence of the so-called President of Zimbabwe

is not acceptable among the brotherhoo­d and sisterhood of nations. He (Mnangagwa) cannot sit at the table among other such nations. So we are raising our voices to say we reject him.”

Last month, Mnangagwa met British ambassador to Zimbabwe Melanie Robinson in Harare in preparatio­n for the United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP 26).

The Zimbabwean government viewed the invitation as a step towards re-engagement with the internatio­nal community.

Ndiweni was dethroned by Mnangagwa’s government as a chief and is based in the UK.

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