THE Law Society of Zimbabwe (LSZ) has taken President
Emmerson Mnangagwa to court, challenging his 2019 presidential decree which
introduced the real-time gross settlement (RTGS) dollars and compulsorily
converted depositors’ United States dollar balances into local currency.
In its application, the LSZ cited Finance minister Mthuli
Ncube, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor John Mangudya, Mnangagwa and
Attorney-General Prince Machaya, as co-respondents.
In his founding affidavit, LSZ executive secretary Edward
Mapara said Mnangagwa’s promulgation of the Presidential Powers (Temporary
Measures) Amendment of the RBZ Act, had effectively resulted in his
organisation incurring huge losses, adding that the move by the Head of State
was contrary to the country’s Constitution.
According to Mapara, sometime in February 2009, the
government introduced the multi-currency system in terms of which the US dollar
was accepted as legal tender alongside other currencies. He said the
introduction of the multi-currency system was regularised and given legal
effect by way of Section 17 of the Finance (No 2) Act, 2009.
“Consequent to the introduction of the US dollar,
Zimbabwean citizens, including the applicant, were allowed to open and operate
US dollar accounts for purposes of transacting in such currency,” Mapara said.
“In terms of section 71(2) of the Constitution, every
person has the right, in any part of Zimbabwe, to acquire, hold, occupy, use,
transfer, hypothecate, lease or dispose of all forms property, either
individually or in association with others.
“The applicant was entitled to hold the funds in the bank
accounts in terms of the provisions of section 70(2), such funds being property
as envisaged in the Constitution. The US dollar obligations owed to the
applicant by its members and members of public constitute assets as envisaged
in section 70 of the Constitution.”
He said in devaluing the bank balances in his
organisation’s FCA accounts and further compulsorily converting the US
dollar-denominated assets into RTGS dollar assets, the State presided over the
compulsory deprivation of his organisation’s right to the US dollar balances
and assets affected by the RTGS dollar regulations.
The compulsory conversion of his organisation’s US
dollar-denominated assets and bank balances, Mapara said, done in terms of
Statutory Instrument 33 of 2019, did not serve any public interests. Newsday
0 comments:
Post a Comment