The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Mwonzora skeletons tumble

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA

THOKOZANI Khupe has revealed that the MDC-T received assistance from the state through judicial and parliament­ary processes in their fight to destroy the Chamisa-led MDC Alliance.

This would seem to confirm the long-held belief that the state is sponsoring turbulence­s in the opposition party.

Khupe and her former ally, Douglas Mwonzora have crossed paths, with the former deputy prime minister and Makokoba legislator on Friday announcing she had taken over leadership of the party in an acting capacity.

She charged Mwonzora had expelled himself from the opposition party by writing to the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) on January 3, declaring that he was the leader of the MDC Alliance.

Khupe made the statements during a press conference held in Bulawayo on Friday. Mwonzora had the previous day pulled out and flagged a suspension letter that he said he had handed to Khupe over a week before. The letter states that Khupe had been suspended for transgress­ions including unholy

alliances with perceived enemies and sabotaging party programmes.

In her visibly emotional address to the press on Friday, Khupe unwittingl­y disclosed that the MDCT enjoyed the backing of government sponsored processes in the ght against Chamisa’s MDC Alliance. She was appealing to the state not to interfere in her current ght with Mwonzora.

“I would like to conclude by emphasisin­g that today the 21st day of January 2022, the MDC-T has two formations,” Khupe said.

“I am therefore pleading with other political parties; as the MDC-T, I am calling on Parliament, a legislativ­e organ of the state, to desist from taking sides as well as Local Government, it happened before, and it must not happen again.

“At the same time, I am calling on the ministry of Justice to be fair and just in dealing with our matter.”

Mwonzora and Khupe have long faced accusation­s of being strange bedfellows with Mnangagwa’s Zanu PF.

On June 11, 2021, Mwonzora met with Mnangagwa at State House where he reportedly sought to push for the scrapping of by-elections now scheduled for March 26. They met again under suspicious circumstan­ces on January 6 soon after the President proclaimed the by-election date.

Mwonzora was given funds under the Political Parties Finance Act despite a court order barring the disburseme­nt of such funds before the challenge by the MDC Alliance was concluded, a developmen­t that seemed to con rm MDC-T and Zanu PF had a special spot for each other.

Mwonzora has so far received millions of dollars under the fund. He has also enjoyed favourable publicity in the state media, something that has been unheard of for any opposition party.

Mwonzora has also declared his recognitio­n of President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s leadership, with his o cial, Morgan Femai describing the President as the best. Mwonzora described Mnangagwa an illegitima­te leader when he was still MDC Alliance secretary-general. MDC Alliance leader, Nelson Chamisa has refused to recognise Mnangagwa as a legitimate president.

Suspicion that the MDC-T was working with Zanu PF to in uence judiciary processes swirled when Mwonzora and MDC-T chairman Morgen Komichi in March 2020 read a prepared speech soon after the Supreme Court ruled that Chamisa was not the bona de leader of the MDC-T.

The developmen­t raised questions on the independen­ce of the judiciary, with many asking how Mwonzora and Komichi knew that the ruling would be in their favour and brought a prepared speech to the court.

The courts later made several more rulings in favour of Khupe and Mwonzora, which the opposition complained about.

In another curious scenario, Mwonzora took over the Morgan Richard Tsvangirai party o ces from the MDC Alliance with the help of the army and the police. Chamisa’s MDC Alliance has since been barred from accessing the party o ces which have literally been guarded day and night by police and soldiers.

Last week too, a leaked audio went viral with Komichi disclosing that Mwonzora was working with Zanu PF. Komichi, also revealed in the audio that Mwonzora had treacherou­sly ascended to power in the 2020 extraordin­ary congress, whose results were disputed by Khupe.

But yesterday, Khupe’s spokespers­on Ntando Ndlovu denied the allegation­s that Khupe had let the cat out of the bag by claiming the MDC-T was getting favours from Mnangagwa.

He said Khupe was in fact a victim of a partial Parliament which favoured Chamisa at her expense.

“The Parliament and Justice ministry should not side with Mwonzora as they did with Chamisa against Dr Khupe in 2018 when she was recalled,” Ndlovu said.

“The Parliament has not been fair on how it dealt with the dispute between Dr Khupe and Chamisa. In 2018, Parliament dismissed her letter in which she had noti ed it to stop considerin­g Chamisa’s intention to recall her, and she was subsequent­ly recalled.

“The Justice ministry also went on to allocate funds under the Political Parties (Finance) Act to Chamisa after she had advised that the party did not qualify for the funds. That is the partiality that she was referring to and that it must not happen again in this case.”

He said Khupe was referring to Chamisa when she said other parties should not interfere in her dispute with Mwonzora, although suspicion was rife that she was referring to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Political analyst and the late Tsvangirai’s former advisor Alex Magaisa said the Mwonzora-Khupe dispute marked the collapse of a “judicially reconstruc­ted party”.

“This circus is a new nadir for the small pseudo-opposition party which owes its existence to a controvers­ial act of judicial reconstruc­tion in March 2020,” Magaisa said.

In March 2020, the Supreme Court ruled Chamisa was not the legitimate leader of the MDC. Khupe had approached the High Court in the ght for the MDC and she won her case, leading to Chamisa’s appeal at the Supreme Court.

Khupe was voted in as MDC-T’s deputy president in 2014, but years later, Tsvangirai appointed Chamisa and Mudzuri as his additional deputies.

She argued that this was in contravent­ion of the party’s constituti­on and that in fact she should have assumed leadership of the party when Tsvangirai died.

“The political partnershi­p between Mwonzora and Khupe has long been a marriage of convenienc­e forti ed solely by a jointly held contempt toward Chamisa. For Chamisa and the MDC Alliance, the scene of their opponents bloodletti­ng without provocatio­n must be sweet news,” Magaisa wrote.

In a viral leaked telephone conversati­on between Komichi and a party youth, only identi ed as Nhira from Chegutu, Komichi trashed Mwonzora’s claim to legitimacy.

“Therefore, we boycotted the election (elective congress) after the second provinces had voted. So, it was not a congress at all. That was one of the bogus things that we did come across. Those results were just announced by one group of people who did all the counting and everything. So, they announced what they wanted as we had withdrawn from participat­ion,” Komichi said.

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