THE opposition MDC Alliance has vowed to fight what it
terms "the subversion of the people's will" by taking back the
parliamentary seats which the Thokozani Khupe-led MDC-T grabbed through
parliamentary recalls and intends to fill with its nominees.
MDC Alliance secretary-general Chalton Hwende said the
party was concluding consultations with the electorate to block the
unconstitutional and subversion of the people's will.
"The people voted us into office and the Zanu-PF
government is trying to block the social contract that we signed with the
electorate. This is clearly a subversion of the people's will. The people are
now being forced to be led by the people they rejected in elections," he
said.
"We are concluding our consultations with the
electorate and we will advise the route we are taking. The Zanu-PF government
has turned this country to be among fascist regimes. The voters will express
their anger on the subversion of their will."
In a notice yesterday, Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec)
chief executive officer Utoile Silaigwana said the commission was ready to fill
the vacant 15 proportional representation posts in line with section 39 of the
Electoral Act.
"Zimbabwe Electoral Commission would like to inform
the public that it is proceeding with filling in the proportional
representation vacant seats which arose from recalls made by MDCT party in line
with provisions of section 39 of the Electoral Act," he said.
"It is important to note that the commission is not
the arbiter of who may or not recall a Member of Parliament. It merely
facilitates the filling of the resultant vacancy in the confidence that
Parliament has conformed to its governing procedures and to the law in
notifying it of the vacancies."
Silaigwana said if there were objections to the creation of
the vacancy, the "remedy for that lies not in an attack on the performance
of peremptory statutory functions by the commission, but elsewhere"
Last week, legal think-tank Veritas warned that Zec might
entangle itself in legal hurdles if it fills the vacancies as the recalls were
legally questionable.
Parliament accepted the recall of the MPs from the Nelson
Chamisa-led party despite that the fired legislators contested under MDC
Alliance and competed against MDC-T candidates.
MDC-T acting secretary-general Douglas Mwonzora recalled 21
MDC Alliance legislators from Parliament after the Supreme Court judgment of
March 30, 2020 restored Khupe as interim party leader.
Some MDC Alliance councillors have also been recalled.
MDC-T acting spokesperson Khaliphani Phugeni yesterday said
the party had already sent its nominees list to Zec.
"The secretary-general Douglas Mwonzora has submitted
the list to Zec and there is no violation of the Constitution because it is
clear that when a party sponsors a member to represent Parliament and if that
sponsored member ceases to be a member of that party, that party can choose a
representative. The Constitution is being followed here," he said.
In Harare, the party nominated Yvonne Musarurwa and Lindani
Moyo, Mashonaland Central (Sawuke January), Manicaland (Getrude Moyo),
Matabeleland South (Sipho Mokone and Nomalanga Khumalo), Bulawayo (Khupe,
Phugeni, Tamano Moyo and Dorothy Ndlovu), Matabeleland North (Chief Ndlovu and
Lwazi Sibanda), Midlands (Teti Banda), Masvingo (Memory Munochinzwa) and
Mashonaland East (Piniel Denga).
The MDC Alliance yesterday said the move was meant to
cripple its leader Chamisa through the court rulings and give an edge to
Zanu-PF.
According to a source, the MDC-T is expected to recall more
constituencybased legislators from the MDC Alliance when Parliament resumes
sitting next Tuesday.
The High Court on Friday dismissed an urgent bid by 14
recalled legislators to stop the MDC-T from replacing them in Parliament.
Political analyst Rashweat Mukundu said Zec was violating
the Electoral Act and voters' rights.
"People cast their ballots in the 2018 harmonised
elections and they picked MDC Alliance candidates against MDCT candidates, so
this is a gross violation of the rights of the electorate. This shows how
interference of the Judiciary by the State has made this to happen," he
said.
"Filling the vacant posts with MDCT candidates is
violating voter's rights. Even those parliamentarians (MDC Alliance) who
supported Khupe have violated their social contract with voters. This shows the
high level of political chaos in this country and it needs to be corrected
sooner rather than later." Newsday
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