News / National
Chamisa wants Mnangagwa to fire Chiwenga, Mohadi
04 Sep 2018 at 15:16hrs | Views
MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa has reportedly demanded the axing of Vice Presidents Constantino Chiwenga and Kembo Mohadi in a list of demands he has reportedly placed before President Emmerson Mnangagwa before he could accept the latter as President.
According to NewZimbabwe.com, his spokesperson Nkululeko Sibanda said weekend that the opposition leader will not negotiate in public although he could not be drawn into revealing if there was any engagement between the political rivals.
However, Chamisa continues to confide in his close allies and advisers on what he wanted attended to before he could agree on a working relationship with Mnangagwa.
According to one of his confidantes, Chamisa is reportedly driving a hard bargain - some bordering on the ridiculous.
"Nelson Chamisa has now set conditions after Mnangagwa proposed a GNU inclusive cabinet, which among them, is for Mnangagwa to accept defeat and declare him outright winner," said the source, adding, "…Mnangagwa to collapse his recently set up Presidium structure which includes Vice Presidents Constantino Chiwenga and Kembo Mohadi."
According to NewZimbabwe.com, his spokesperson Nkululeko Sibanda said weekend that the opposition leader will not negotiate in public although he could not be drawn into revealing if there was any engagement between the political rivals.
However, Chamisa continues to confide in his close allies and advisers on what he wanted attended to before he could agree on a working relationship with Mnangagwa.
According to one of his confidantes, Chamisa is reportedly driving a hard bargain - some bordering on the ridiculous.
"Nelson Chamisa has now set conditions after Mnangagwa proposed a GNU inclusive cabinet, which among them, is for Mnangagwa to accept defeat and declare him outright winner," said the source, adding, "…Mnangagwa to collapse his recently set up Presidium structure which includes Vice Presidents Constantino Chiwenga and Kembo Mohadi."
Source - newzimbabwe