Mugabe in trouble as Mnangagwa’s govt arrests allies, targets more

President Emmerson Mnangagwa is set to engage the services of Interpol to hunt down Robert Mugabe’s allies.
 

In what is considered as beginning of probe of Mugabe’s government, Mnangagwa has ordered arrest of former officials who fled the country when the military toppled the veteran ruler last month.

Former ministers Jonathan Moyo, Saviour Kasukuwere and Paddy Zhanda are believed to be the prime targets because of alleged corruption-related crimes, The Standard reports.

The Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) pursued Moyo during Mugabe’s era for the alleged theft of Zimbabwe Manpower Development Fund money.

ZACC has already arrested four close Mugabe allies namely Joseph Made, Walter Chidakwa, Ignatius Chombo and Jason Machaya.

Former Zanu PF youth leaders Kudzanai Chipanga and Innocent Hamandishe were also arrested on criminal charges linked to the army takeover.

Home Affairs minister Obert Mpofu told The Standard that the government would use Interpol to apprehend those outside the country.

“We are doing everything possible to ensure that those that have committed crimes within Zimbabwe and are outside Zimbabwe are brought to book. If it means engaging Interpol, we will go that route,” he said.

“The process is two-pronged, we are looking at the local investigations and outside investigations and outside investigations, they involve Interpol.”

However, Mpofu refused to single out Kasukuwere, Zhanda and Moyo as the prime targets of the investigation.


“We are talking about all those that committed crimes in Zimbabwe and if they committed crimes, they will be involved in this exercise.”

“If those three are involved in crimes committed in Zimbabwe they will definitely be part of our investigations,” the minister added.

Reacting, Human Rights Watch’s southern Africa director Dewa Mavhinga said the government must prove that the spate of arrests was not a form of revenge by the Zanu PF Lacoste faction, which won the battle to succeed Mugabe.

“Mnangagwa’s government has a challenge to demonstrate that recent arrests of former ministers are not driven by vengeance and political witch-hunting and that there is total commitment to rooting out corruption,” he said.

“Will the government target some current ministers who have in the past been publicly accused of corruption like Obert Mpofu, who was accused of demanding a $10 million bribe by Lovemore Kurotwi?

“There is an urgent need to build public confidence that the government is serious about ending corruption regardless of factional affiliation.”

Human rights activist Patson Dzamara said the arrests had nothing to do with corruption but were an extension of Zanu PF factional wars.

“There is absolutely no way these arrests can be about corruption,” he said.

“It’s no brainer appreciating that Zanu PF is a den of corruption, but when you see one corrupt individual arresting another then you must know it’s not about corruption.


“The arrests of G40 members is becoming a nauseating charade. For them to want us to believe that only those who were/are in G40 are corrupt is an unpalatable and unamusing childish joke.”
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