My horror encounter with Finance deputy minister Terrence
Mukupe on Thursday May 24, will remain etched in my mind forever.
Early in the day a colleague at Spot FM, Chamunorwa Murava,
invited me to his programme, Focus, to discuss an amateur video of Mukupe
addressing a Zanu PF cell meeting in Harare’s affluent surburb of Mandara.
The video clip was the source of a lead story which I had
recently written for NewsDay in which the deputy minister said the army had not
taken power from then President Robert Mugabe so that they could hand it over
to MDC-T leader Nelson Chamisa, should the latter win the forthcoming
elections.
The invitation was for me a chance to engage with the
audience alongside Mukupe. I was supposed to go out with my wife, Florence, after
the programme, so she accompanied me to Pockets Hill studios.
The minister was already there, with two aides, when we
arrived. I exchanged pleasantries with the three gentlemen.
For the first few minutes of the show, all was well. Then
Mukupe claimed I had been hired to soil his image and done stories just to bury
his political life. The allegations were baseless.
I responded that in my 15-year journalism career, I had
only done three stories on him: when he assaulted a top ministry official, when
he made the allegations that army would not allow Chamisa to take power and
another on a social media onslaught against him.
This was my first real life interaction with him. In the
midst of the discussion, he stood up as if to leave the studio but turned on
me, full of rage.
The last transmission in the radio programme was me crying
out for help, “But minister why do you want to assault me.”
His aides tried to restrain him as he said I needed to be
taught a lesson. My wife captured the moment of madness on her phone, a Samsung
S7 Edge. Mukupe then charged towards her and wrestled the phone from my wife
with the assistance of his aides.
The deputy minister took the phone after tearing her jacket
and dared us to report the matter to whoever we wanted.
Unfortunately, Murava’s studio does not have cameras so the
only evidence of the vicious attack is in the phone which he stole.
ZBC staffers were helpful in trying to call security and
eventually getting a soldier at the complex to escort Florence and myself to
our car.
We then drove to Highlands police station to make a report
of theft, malicious damage to property and assault. Then all hell broke loose.
Mukupe was already at the police station filing a report against us. The police
handling the matter then told us we were the accused persons. We were made to
wait in a little room while Mukupe was being attended to by a sergeant on duty
that day.
After almost an hour, a very polite officer came to the
holding room and began to record a statement from Florence. She was very
helpful and tried to assist us to recover the phone from Mukupe. The deputy
minister was, however, allowed to leave before we had filed our own report.
Just a few weeks ago, Commissioner General Police Godwin
Matanga told the nation the force was adopting a professional way of policing.
“I want to stress that, I take greater exception to
commanders who develop jelly legs and become jittery in fear of taking prompt
and appropriate action when the ‘so called’ political bigwigs commit crimes, be
they politically motivated or otherwise,” he said.
Sadly, his officers at Highlands police station failed the
test. They opened a docket against the minister but did not bother to get a
warned and cautioned statement from him, they decided to make it a summons case
despite justifiable evidence that the minister could use his influence to
interfere with witnesses.
The police also opened a docket against Florence and
myself, threatened us with detention but did not even bother to inform us about
the charges being laid against us and neither did they collect warned and
cautioned statements from us.
Words previously uttered by Mukupe begun to make sense to
me – he was above the law, this is why he dared us to report to whomsoever we
wanted.
Florence did not sleep she had nightmare’s the whole night.
There was heartfelt outpouring of love and concern from
colleagues. AMH Chief Operating Officer, Kangai Maukazuva, kept checking on me
together with the managing director, and Zimbabwe Union of Journalists
secretary-general Foster Dongozi.
Some people I never knew had my number called me and
encouraged me to remain strong. Others, however, went political and also
insulted my wife for accompanying me to the studio.
My call is to President Emmerson Mnangagwa, a man I know
personally, to make good his word.
It is time for him to ensure that the new dispensation is
indeed “new”. Some kind of action will comfort not only my family, but the rest
of the nation. Newsday
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