PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa has reportedly ordered his Zanu PF party to fast-track internal constitutional amendments to enable him to plot the succession roadmap in consultation with the proposed council of elders.
The amendments to be tabled at the party congress set for
next month, would, according to insiders, enable him to step down as State
President after serving his two five-year terms and continue as party
president.
Party sources said the council of elders would comprise
Zanu PF old guard retired from government and deployed to the party to serve as
advisers to the State President — effectively running government business from
the party headquarters.
But it is the succession issue that Mnangagwa is said to be
more interested in to avoid going the same way as his predecessor the late
Robert Mugabe who was toppled in a military-assisted coup in 2017 after 37
years in power.
The council of elders will be composed of former party
presidents and other “senior members”, Zanu PF secretary for legal affairs Paul
Mangwana told NewsDay yesterday.
“We have a council of elders made up of former Presidents
and other senior members and their duty is to advise the President and settle
disputes especially among senior members,” Mangwana said.
“We have created the council of elders and it will be
appointed this year,” he said without giving specific timelines.
Mnangagwa, who is understood to be consolidating his grip
on the ruling party through all its structures, reportedly wants to amend the
Zanu PF constitution to allow him to remain the leader of the party after his
two maximum terms in office as State President expire.
But Mangwana dismissed the claims, saying that would be
unconstitutional.
“That (making Mnangagwa party president beyond his maximum
terms as State President) would not be consistent with the national
Constitution which is the supreme law of the land and it is my duty to ensure
that our party constitution does not contradict with the national
Constitution,” Mangwana said.
He added: “We have
made sure our constitution is in harmony with the national Constitution. The
national Constitution has two presidential term limits; whereas our party
constitution has no term limits, but it says whoever is party president becomes
our presidential candidate for national elections so that means there is
harmony.”
Mangwana also dismissed speculation that the presidential
candidate as well as his deputies would be handpicked by the party leadership.
Mnangagwa assumed the Zanu PF party leadership after
usurping power from Mugabe through a military-assisted coup in November 2017.
Soon after assuming power, he retired party bigwigs Obert Mpofu, Patrick
Chinamasa and Simbarashe Mumbengegwi among others from government and deployed
them to work fulltime at the party headquarters.
The amendments to the Zanu PF constitution are coming after
Mnangagwa indicated in 2019 that the ruling party would establish a war
veterans league and a council of elders to restore unity and discipline in the
party. The war veterans’ league was set up recently and held its inaugural
conference early this month.
Meanwhile, former long-serving State Security minister and
close Mugabe ally Didymus Mutasa has claimed that Mnangagwa might lose the 2023
polls after failing to douse the factional fights within the ruling party.
Mutasa, a former Zanu PF secretary for administration, made
the remarks while responding to allegations that he was decampaigning former
Finance minister Patrick Chinamasa in Makoni district Manicaland province by
influencing Zanu PF party members to vote him out of the central committee.
Both Mutasa and Chinamasa hail from Makoni district.
Chinamasa was dressed down during a Zanu PF Makoni
inter-district meeting that was held in Rusape last week, where party members
requested that his central committee position be challenged in the upcoming
internal party polls.
This was after Zanu PF Makoni district co-ordinating
committee (DCC) chairperson Albert Nyakuedzwa attempted to impose Chinamasa on
the grounds that the former Finance minister be spared as a member of the
politburo.
“People are against
Chinamasa since he was also the one who was behind the downfall of Mutasa as
they both wanted to control the Makoni district and Manicaland as well,” a
source in Makoni said.
Before his fall from grace, Mutasa was regarded as Zanu PF
political Godfather in Manicaland province.
Contacted for comment yesterday, Mutasa said: “I enjoy respect not only in Makoni, but in
Manicaland province and countrywide.
Yes, l have heard the issue of me and Comrade Patrick Chinamasa
fighting, and this is not the first time I have heard about that. But, l don’t know anything about that. I am
not haunting anyone.”
He said the party leadership needed to work hard to win
next year’s polls.
“I am not talking about Manicaland province, but the whole
country. The party is in trouble, leaders in the party should work hard — hear
me correctly, I am saying all the leaders.
If they want to win, they have to stop gossiping within the party,”
Mutasa said. Newsday
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