Will Mnangagwa deliver on promise to tackle corruption? 

Source: Will Mnangagwa deliver on promise to tackle corruption? | News24

Bulawayo – On November 24, Emmerson Mnangagwa arrived in Harare’s main sports stadium to the cheers of tens of thousands of enthusiastic supporters.

Moments after being sworn in as Zimbabwe’s new president, the 75-year-old was quick to lay out his top priorities and vision for the future.

“As we focus on recovering the economy, we must shed misbehaviours and acts of indiscipline which have characterised the past,” Mnangagwa said in his inauguration address. “Acts of corruption must stop forthwith.”

As Mnangagwa marks one month in office on Sunday, his pledge to restore the economy and crack down on government corruption offers hope to many Zimbabweans grappling with cash shortages and sky-high unemployment.

This week, in his maiden state of the nation address, Mnangagwa promised to unveil a new range of reforms aimed at boosting growth and reviving the country’s key manufacturing and agricultural sectors.

Vowing to tackle corruption, he said there will be no impunity under his watch, while also warning against vengeful retribution.

“There should be no sacred cows,” said Mnangagwa, an ex-vice president and for years a close ally to long-time President Robert Mugabe.

‘He must act’

Parts of Zimbabwe are desperately poor after years of economic mismanagement and rampant corruption under Mugabe’s 37-year rule. Last year, the country ranked 154th out of 176 countries on Transparency International’s 2016 Corruption Perception Index.

A number of investigations by international rights groups in recent years has uncovered wide-scale graft in the mining industry involving top government and military officials.

A Global Witness report released earlier this year accused security and intelligence elites of being involved in the looting of the eastern Chiadzwa diamond fields under Mugabe’s rule. Last year, the former president stunned Zimbabweans when he publicly admitted that an estimated $15bn is unaccounted for in gem sales.

Mnangagwa’s promise to crack down on endemic corruption has been welcomed by many in the country.

“The time of Mugabe encouraged a lot of thieving, but this time Mnangagwa has to do better,” said Sibusisiwe Siziba, a 45-year-old domestic worker in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second city and previously the hub of its manufacturing industry.

“He was part of the government which was stealing before, but this time he has another chance,” she told Al Jazeera, expressing hope that despite the past scandals, a more transparent leadership had ascended to power.

“He must act if there is corruption, or we will lose our country again.”

However, a wave of detentions of ex-top government and ruling party officials has also raised questions, with critics saying the arrests are mostly driven by political motives rather a zero tolerance approach towards graft.

On Friday, ex-agriculture minister Joseph Made and former provincial affairs minister Jason Machaya became the latest former officials to be hit with charges of corruption and abuse of office.

Their detentions came days after Walter Chidhakwa, ex-minister of mines and mining development, and Francis Gudyanga, former permanent secretary of mines, appeared in court on charges of abuse of office.

The two are also accused of authorising the improper constitution of a board of a state-owned enterprise involved in the sale and marketing of Zimbabwe’s minerals.

‘Selective’ arrests

The latest apprehensions follow on the heels of the arrests of ex-finance minister Ignatius Chombo, former leader of the ZANU-PF Youth League Kudzanai Chipanga and his deputy Innocent Hamandishe.

They were first taken into police custody on the evening of Mnangagwa’s inauguration, with each facing separate charges of corruption and other criminal acts. However, after being granted bail, the trio re-appeared in court last week on charges of criminal nuisance for wearing ZANU-PF regalia inscribed with Mnangagwa’s “E.D” initials and the ruling party’s flag.

The three were expelled from ZANU-PF last month for their alleged involvement in the Generation-40 (G40) faction backing former First Lady Grace Mugabe to succeed her 93-year-old husband.

Mugabe was sacked as the party’s first secretary leading to his resignation as state president days later, following the launch of a military operation aimed at “targeting criminals” around the veteran leader and stopping the purges of key figures within ZANU-PF.

At the time, then-vice president Mnangagwa was fired and expelled from the party, but after temporarily fleeing into exile, he came to power through the army’s Operation Restore Legacy action.

Dumiso Dabengwa, leader of the opposition ZAPU party and a former minister of home affairs, said that while a crackdown on corrupt officials was justified, he believed that the arrests appeared to be politically motivated.

“The operation was not just targeted at criminals, as they call them, but it seems selective of who those people were; which faction they belonged to; and if they belong to the G40 faction, they certainly had to be disciplined by getting arrested and laying charges on them,” Dabengwa told Al Jazeera.

“If one group can be charged with fraudulent activity, then what about that one who remains there [in government] who did worse things than those arrested? The whole lot of them have got one corrupt thing or another to answer for,” he added.

Dewa Mavhinga, the southern Africa director for Human Rights Watch, agreed, telling Al Jazeera that the arrests appeared to be driven along “factional lines”.

Mavhinga said it was imperative for Mnangagwa to demonstrate a greater commitment to accountability and respect for the rule of law than his predecessor.

“The key challenge is for President Mnangagwa to walk the talk and demonstrate through comprehensive action, that his government has zero tolerance to corruption,” he added.

“To restore public confidence, Mnangagwa must show that the fight against corruption is genuine, and not a witch hunt of political opponents.”

Controversial appointments

Mnangagwa, who describes himself as a “military man”, has appointed a number of figures to his cabinet who have been linked to corruption cases or have faced graft allegations in the past.

Kembo Mohadi, the newly-appointed second vice president of ZANU-PF and current minister of defence, security and war veterans, has been implicated in the alleged invasion of at least two commercial farms, despite the government’s one-man-one-farm policy.

Retired Lieutenant General Sibusiso Moyo, currently the minister of foreign affairs and international relations, was accused in a 2002 UN panel experts report of having “covert financial interests” in the Democratic Republic of Congo while serving as director of a Zimbabwean company.

Moyo has denied any wrongdoing.

The government is yet to comment on the various allegations in the agriculture and mining industry levelled at some of Mnangagwa’s cabinet members.

Efforts to contact Chris Mutsvangwa, presidential adviser and leader of the influential war veterans’ association that called for mass marches against Mugabe, were unsuccessful.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 1
  • comment-avatar
    Ever curious. 6 years ago

    I was so interested in your article that I felt I must respond.

    Kembo Mohadi, current Minister of Defence – He is promoted despite his “alleged invasion of at least two commercial farms”.
    Sibusiso Moyo promoted to “Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Relations was accused in 2002 UN panel of expert report of having “covert financial interests” in the Democratic Republic of Congo while serving as director of a Zimbabwean company.
    Robert Mugabe,Emmerson Mnangagwa,the current Minister of Agriculture Mr.Philip Sibanda, Vice President Chiwenga and the late Solomon Mujuru amassed great wealth during the 5year Civil War in the DRC.They still receive money from interests in Congo.
    Come election time we have Mr. Mudede who worked with a secret Israeli organisation which rigged the last elections.Is he classed as corrupt?Mugabe visited Israel recently!!!
    Minister of Agriculture Mr.Philip Sibanda is well positioned to “persuade” the rural folk how to cast their vote.
    Mr I Chombo may never appear in Court because he knows too much about the current “Government.”
    Orbert Mpofu who symbolises corruption is Minister of Home Affairs.He is in charge of Zimbabwe Republic Police!!!
    Mr.Mugabe was very obviously saved from impeachment, so does he still rule the country? look at “Zimbabwe Situation” article
    21/11/2017 to see what he has stolen.The Marange diamond looting was between $20billion and $21billion.How much has his wife who has never been employed stolen? Mr Chombo has some of those details.What about her mansion in Quazulu?
    The news reporter Vanguard’s Smith said;”The scale of looting is truly staggering and criminal,and we’ll only know the collective extent of it long after it has gone”.The people of this country can demand its return!!!!!
    The article entitled “The cost of the Mugabe Era”dated 22/12/2017″shows how Mugabe cannot ever be classed as a statesman.He has been stripped of all his accolades.