Zanu PF has suspended five Mutare District Coordination Committee(DCC) members for alleged indiscipline and illegal parcelling out of land in the Gimboki area of Mutare under the cover of the ruling party’s name.
Zanu PF Manicaland provincial secretary for Information and
Publicity, Cde Sam Matema, confirmed the suspension of Mutare DCC chairman,
Binali Yard and other executive members, Brian Marange, Tawanda Ndawe, Webster
Mudzimwa and Trust Matimba.
In a statement this week, Cde Matema, who is also the
Member of National Assembly for Buhera Central, said: “The Zanu PF provincial
executive has suspended Mutare District Coordinating Committee (DCC) chairman,
Binali Yard and four members of his executive — Brian Marange, Tawanda Ndawe,
Webster Mudzimwa and Trust Matimba — on account of indiscipline and
illegalities finding expression in the illegal parcelling of land in the
Gimboki area of Mutare municipality under the cover of the party’s name.
“Zanu PF is a party that is principled, structured,
disciplined and with order, and brooks no indiscipline and corrupt activities.
‘‘We formed the Government as the ruling party, and we want
to see the genuine concerns of the citizenry being addressed by both local and
Central Government in a legal and orderly manner without bringing the name of
the revolutionary party — Zanu PF — into disrepute.”
Yard, Marange, Ndawe, Mudzimwa and Matimba were arrested
last week by a team of detectives from the Criminal Investigations Department’s
Police Anti-Corruption Unit and CID Homicide from Harare.
They allegedly contravened Section 24 (1) as read with
Section 24 (4) of the Regional Town and Country Planning Act, Chapter 19:12
(Unlawful carrying out development without permission) or alternatively
criminal trespass as defined in Section 132 of the Criminal Law (Codification
and Reform) Act, Chapter 9:23.
They were not asked to plead when they appeared before
Mutare provincial magistrate, Mr Tendai Mahwe who remanded them in custody to
December 29.
In denying them bail, Mr Mahwe said Yard once fled from the
police after a high-speed chase in Mutare.
He also stated that police had failed to arrest the five
since September, and it had to take the intervention of law enforcement agents
from Harare to bring them to book.
The court also ruled that Yard once threatened some
witnesses from Mutare City Council who are the complainant; hence if granted
bail, the accused persons might use their political influence to threaten
witnesses.
The five were represented by Mr Chris Ndlovu of Gonese and
Ndlovu Legal Practitioners, while Mrs Tadiwanashe Muuya represented the State.
Mr Ndlovu was this week making frantic efforts to approach
the High Court for the five’s bail application.
“We filed the appeal at the High Court. We are informed
that the State will oppose it. We are still waiting for their written
response,” said Mr Ndlovu yesterday (Thursday). Manica Post
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