RECENTLY-EXPELLED Zanu PF Mashonaland Central official Goodman Tamuona Musariri says he is going to challenge President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s legitimacy in the courts of law.
He allegedly denounced Mnangagwa and called upon
Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga to take over from his boss and is now
considering forming his own party. NewsDay (ND) reporter Garikai Mafirakureva
caught up with the ambitious Musariri (GTM) to talk about his experiences and
also his political ambitions.
ND: Who is Goodman Tamuona Musariri and what makes you
think that you can dictate the power matrix in Zanu PF?
GTM: I love to be identified as a statesman more than a
politician. I was born in Kadoma. I turned 40 on October 19. I am a former head
of treasury operations at the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe where I also worked as a
money market dealer, settlements manager, sinking funds and donor funds
administrator and manager ledgers to mention a few assignments.
I also worked for CBZ, Royal Bank and Legend Asset
Management before I joined RBZ, which forms my 12-year banking experience. I
joined Zanu PF at the age of 15 in Kadoma in 1995.
ND: What made you want to join Zanu PF at such a tender age
given that most young men were joining the opposition as they felt that the
ruling party was responsible for running down the economy?
GTM: I joined Zanu PF in line with the party constitution
that says one can join the youth league from as early as 15 years. In 1995,
Zanu PF was still a formidable party leading a robust economy probably up to the
Black Friday of 1997 when the balance of payment support was taken away after
the compensation of war veterans.
ND: I understand you recently had a brush with the law and
you were hauled before the courts facing charges of undermining the authority
of the President. What pushed you to make such utterances?
GTM: Yes, I was arrested on April 3, 2020 and am currently
on remand against an anonymous complainant for undermining the authority of the
President. I believe my arrest was politically-driven following my intention to
challenge Mnangagwa’s ascendancy to power.
I have since denied the charges to allow the State to
investigate as I was informed in one of my remand hearings that no
investigations had taken place which prompted the State to apply for the
authority to prosecute and which authority has not been granted as yet. The
State will give the verdict on my application on December 16, 2020.
ND: It is on record that you said VP Chiwenga should take
over from Mnangagwa. What has changed now that makes you want to go for the
presidential seat yourself?
GTM: I became a fan of the Operation Restore Legacy of
November 2017 which was led by General Chiwenga and the army which I believed
was going to end up with the formation of much-awaited transitional authority
led by Chiwenga himself. I find Mnangagwa’s ascendancy through the unsanctioned
Zanu PF central committee caucus of November 19 2017 unlawful, null and void.
Chiwenga like any VP in Zanu PF is not an elected member of
congress, but an appointee of the President to serve at Mnangagwas pleasure and
mercy. Both the MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa and Mnangagwa were
illegitimate presidential candidates for 2018.
Thus the whole ‘new dispensation’ is voidable with
Chiwenga’s position being held in abeyance or in suspense mode unless he claims
the revision of Operation Restore Legacy after acknowledging the illegitimacy
of the ascendancy of Mnangagwa. I, however, would love to see Zimbabwe changing
from liberation war movement politics and administration to the modern
constitutional participatory multi-party electoral democracy.
ND: From your explanation it seems you are saying the
current administration has failed dismally. What do you have to offer which is
different from the current crop of leaders if people vote for you?
GTM: From the economic front, I would love to replace the
“short termism” in policies and replace them with turn-around strategies that
are guided by long-term visions that are not mathematical, but linked to real
thematic indicators to thrust the economy to heights never attained before. I
intend to make every single term of office able to seriously arrest and reverse
the current economic decline in order to attain a stable, prosperous and
healthy economy. I will also eradicate all capture of the polity and Judiciary
which is currently characterised by a patronage-driven system in which a small
ruling elite, political associates, legislators and public servants are
provided with jobs in return for loyalty, regardless of their performance.
ND: Was contesting for presidency always your dream, is it
just sour grapes after you were kicked out of the party and then you decided to
throw the hat in the ring?
GTM: Yes, I have always wanted to lead Zimbabwe at least
for a term or two since I was elected the group leader at school when I was in
Grade 1 in 1987. God had told me that I would be President after attaining 40
years together with Zimbabwe and I am going to become the first born-free
President of Zimbabwe.
ND: In your view, what went wrong with the current Zanu PF
leadership?
GTM: I strongly think that Zimbabwe is going through two
major crises namely: constitutional which houses permanent illegitimacy,
negative contra-indications around the President after the November 2017 coup.
It appears the whole world has turned its back against Zimbabwe as attested by
both the United States and Britain promising fresh and or intensified
sanctions.
The army took over Zanu PF on November 15, 2017 which makes
the army the biggest stakeholder in the polity of Zimbabwe. I also strongly
feel that the so-called new dispensation is only giving out theoretical
standpoints like the failed austerity measures. Also Mnangagwa’s Borrowdale
Racecourse meeting with whites shows great puppetry to the white former
colonisers at the expense of the black native Zimbabweans who owned the same
land before 1890.
ND: So you are saying Mnangagwa is an illegitimate leader
and the 2018 election are null and void?
GTM: The late Robert Mugabe only resigned from his position
as Head of State and government not as president and first secretary of Zanu
PF. This means that Mugabe died still the president and first secretary of Zanu
PF.
After all, if a vacancy had arisen in the office of
president and first secretary of Zanu PF, an extraordinary congress had to be
convoked by either the secretary for administration or any other right organ as
clearly spelt out by section 26 of the Zanu PF constitution. The worst fatal error
made by Zanu PF was the said illegal central committee caucus of November 19,
2017 which was orchestrated and spearheaded by non-central committee members
like Christopher Mutsvangwa.
ND: What do you think about the ever-rising number of
parties and presidential candidates? Do these people have people at heart or
they are just doing it for personal enrichment?
GTM: I envisage many politically-exposed persons vying for
presidency, MP and councillor at primary elections as an essential element to
augment intra-party participatory democracy in Zimbabwe.
If Parliament could resemble many political party
representatives having a few seats each, it would bring perfect parliamentary
oversight in Zimbabwe. However, the Monthlante Commission recommended that there
should be a Political Parties Act to guide the registration of political
parties and their affairs. Newsday
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