SELF-EXILED Zanu PF G40 kingpins Saviour Kasukuwere and
Walter Mzembi yesterday scoffed at President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s threat to
have them extradited from South Africa for prosecution.
They said they would invoke international laws to block the
planned extradition. The two ex-officials said Mnangagwa would not succeed in
his “desperate attempt to weaponise prosecutions” to annihilate political
opponents.
Mnangagwa on Saturday announced that he would soon apply
for the extradition of Kasukuwere and Mzembi from the neighbouring country to
face justice at home.
He was addressing a Zanu PF provincial co-ordinating
meeting in Gweru.
Mnangagwa accused the G40 duo, who left the country after
the November 2017 military coup, of peddling falsehoods on social media to
taint his government’s image.
He said the two former top Zanu PF officials had
overstretched his patience. His threats came a few days after a delegation from
South Africa met with top Zanu PF officials over the deteriorating
socio-economic and political situation in the country.
Mnangagwa’s government has denied that the country is in a
crisis.
Kasukuwere and Mzembe had no kind words for Mnangagwa
yesterday, accusing him of plotting vengeance and retribution against perceived
foes at the expense of building the economy.
“Unlike (former President Robert) Mugabe who spent the
first three years of his reign trying to build the country’s education, health
and economy, Mnangagwa is spending his first three years plotting arrests,
abductions and killing of political opponents,” Kasukuwere fumed.
“It (extradition) is going to be resisted, there are
international laws that protect us. He has already convicted us before we even
come and laws will protect us. We are even more innocent than Mnangagwa
himself.”
Mzembi said his difference with Mnangagwa was political and
arises from the November 2017 coup, which he said averted an impending congress
in December 2017 to choose Mugabe’s successor.
“It is not a secret that there were two factions contesting
for power in Zanu PF. Now identifying G40 leadership for prosecution on distant
things that do not even border on criminality is a good example of
weaponisation of prosecutions.
“He used the Zimbabwe Defence Forces to arbitrate in an
intra-party dispute between two factions, G40 and Lacoste, and that dispute,
because it was summarily resolved by force, stands to this day. The battle for
the soul and minds of Zanu PF continues, with him as hanging on the military
thread, imposing himself, while the legitimate party is in exile,” Mzembi said.
“It is that which makes him do the unthinkable and
unprecedented of addressing district meetings seeking grassroots support which
is clearly not with him and making preposterous statements where he becomes the
judge, jury, prosecutor of his opponents. He is an expert at weaponising
criminal prosecution against political opponents.”
Mzembi added: “It can’t miss the observation of the people
that this is an unresolved political dispute with the younger generation.
“There is no solution to the Zimbabwean crisis that does
not start with introspection into Zanu PF. Others in Zanu PF who are inside the
country cannot speak out because of fear of victimisation.”
He said Mnangagwa was suffering a legitimacy crisis on two
fronts.
“Internally, he does not have legitimacy and externally,
his poll victory is contested. That is why he targeted Nelson Chamisa (MDC
Alliance president) and his deputy, Tendai Biti in his address. He knows apart
from the legitimacy crisis he has in his party, he also suffers a crisis in
government.”
The former Tourism minister also accused Mnangagwa of being
vindictive to the extent of confiscating his personal car, a Mercedes-Benz
GL350, which he claimed was bought as part of his service vehicle after the
United National World Tourism Organisation general assembly in 2013.
He claimed Mnangagwa had turned the car into his personal
property.
Kasukuwere also claimed his service vehicle, a Range Rover,
was taken away and given to Home Affairs minister Kazembe Kazembe after the
military bombarded his home in Harare in November 2017.
“Mnangagwa also confiscated my Mercedes-Benz vehicle I
bought in 2013 claiming I stole it from (former State security minister)
Nicholas Goche. The car remains with Mnangagwa’s administration despite
producing papers to prove my ownership to it,” he said. Newsday
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