The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Decision Day

• All eyes on the Constituti­onal Court Bench • Inaugurati­on expected 48hours after judgment

- Herald Reporter

THE Constituti­onal Court (Concourt) is today expected to deliver judgment on the election petition by MDC-Alliance leader Mr Nelson Chamisa contesting President Mnangagwa’s victory in the July 30 harmonised elections.

The petition hearing is the first to be streamed live from the courtroom in the history of the country.

President Mnangagwa romped to victory with 50,67 percent of the total votes cast, followed by Mr Chamisa, who garnered 44,3 percent.

If the court endorses President Mnangagwa’s victory, he is expected to be inaugurate­d within 48 hours as postulated under the Electoral Act which has to be by 2pm on Sunday.

The ruling of the court will be final and cannot be appealed.

A nine-member Concourt Bench on Wednesday heard arguments by counsels for all parties involved in the case in which Mr Chamisa is seeking a determinat­ion of the petition in terms of the provisions of Section 93 (3) of the Constituti­on.

Through his lawyers, led by Advocate Thabani Mpofu, Mr Chamisa has asked the court to invalidate President Mnangagwa’s victory on the basis of allegation­s of electoral fraud and malpractic­es.

He is also seeking the court to declare him the winner, saying the poll was not conducted in accordance with the law and was not “free and fair”. Mr Chamisa, however, failed to provide evidence to back his claims.

But President Mnangagwa, who is being represente­d by a team led by Adv Lewis Uriri, argued that there was no valid election petition

challengin­g his victory.

He wants the court to dismiss the Mr Chamisa’s applicatio­n and uphold his victory saying a dismissal order was appropriat­e given the fact that the petition was void of evidence and replete with flagrant procedural irregulari­ties.

President Mnangagwa said the applicatio­n was not served with all documents that Mr Chamisa claimed to have filed.

He further argued that the intention by Mr Chamisa’s lawyers to issue a subpoena against Justice Chigumba shows the MDC Alliance leader accepted the inadequaci­es of his evidence.

In this regard, the President said the proper course of action was for the court to throw out the applicatio­n.

President Mnangagwa contends that Mr Chamisa’s petition is premised on alleged mathematic­al anomalies, which have no factual basis.

This averment was echoed by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission lawyer Mr Tawanda Kanengoni.

In his submission­s, Mr Kanengoni debunked the statistica­l evidence alluded to by Mr Chamisa in his founding papers to prove there were no mathematic­al errors made by the electoral body sufficient to change the results of the presidenti­al poll.

He pointed to the court that Mr Chamisa had no evidence to buttress his rigging claims, arguing the figures he sought to rely on in the applicatio­n were plucked from nowhere.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa welcomes Italian Ambassador to Zimbabwe Mr Carlo Perrotta at State House in Harare yesterday. Looking on is Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Ambassador Joey Bimha. — (See story on Page 2). —(Picture by Justin Mutenda)
President Mnangagwa welcomes Italian Ambassador to Zimbabwe Mr Carlo Perrotta at State House in Harare yesterday. Looking on is Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Ambassador Joey Bimha. — (See story on Page 2). —(Picture by Justin Mutenda)

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