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Tsvangirai in another state of the nation briefing
03 Feb 2014 at 14:30hrs | Views
MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai is today expected to meet diplomats accredited to Zimbabwe and brief them of the state of the nation.
The meeting comes at a time when the MDC is rocked by internal strife with increasing calls for he MDC leader to go. But Tsvangira has has consolidated his grip on the opposition party after he became chief signatory of the party. The development took place during the national executive committee (Nec) meeting on Friday.
The move is seen as curtailing treasurer-General Roy Bennett and his Deputy Elton Mangoma's influence on leadership renewal calls.
In the new setup, the former premier will be the chief signatory to the party's accounts which had been the preserve of the treasurer-general in accordance with the party's constitution.
According to the MDC-T constitution, Article 11 sub-section 11.2, the treasurer-general is the custodian of party funds.
A close source told NewsDay: "The Nec resolved to create a financial committee headed by the party's deputy president Thokozani Khupe and directly answerable to Tsvangirai."
In the heated meeting, some executive members were baying for Mangoma's blood and his expulsion from the party.
However, others said the party could not afford to discipline Mangoma for his deeds.
Another source said three committee members pleaded with the meeting not to be too hard on Mangoma.
"Mangoma was blocked from granting any media interviews by the party and his matter was referred to a disciplinary hearing for putting the name of the party into disrepute. The hearing is not for his opinion which the executive agreed was his democratic right, the problem was the platform he used," the source said.
Another official said the way the agenda was set was meant to shut debate on the Tsvangirai-Mangoma fallout.
Tsvangirai's spokesperson Luke Tamborinyoka declined to comment on the matter saying his boss was concentrating on national issues affecting the country.
"All the robust debate speaks to the democracy that exists in the MDC. The party does not speak democracy, it lives democracy," Tamborinyoka said.
The meeting comes at a time when the MDC is rocked by internal strife with increasing calls for he MDC leader to go. But Tsvangira has has consolidated his grip on the opposition party after he became chief signatory of the party. The development took place during the national executive committee (Nec) meeting on Friday.
The move is seen as curtailing treasurer-General Roy Bennett and his Deputy Elton Mangoma's influence on leadership renewal calls.
In the new setup, the former premier will be the chief signatory to the party's accounts which had been the preserve of the treasurer-general in accordance with the party's constitution.
According to the MDC-T constitution, Article 11 sub-section 11.2, the treasurer-general is the custodian of party funds.
A close source told NewsDay: "The Nec resolved to create a financial committee headed by the party's deputy president Thokozani Khupe and directly answerable to Tsvangirai."
In the heated meeting, some executive members were baying for Mangoma's blood and his expulsion from the party.
However, others said the party could not afford to discipline Mangoma for his deeds.
Another source said three committee members pleaded with the meeting not to be too hard on Mangoma.
"Mangoma was blocked from granting any media interviews by the party and his matter was referred to a disciplinary hearing for putting the name of the party into disrepute. The hearing is not for his opinion which the executive agreed was his democratic right, the problem was the platform he used," the source said.
Another official said the way the agenda was set was meant to shut debate on the Tsvangirai-Mangoma fallout.
Tsvangirai's spokesperson Luke Tamborinyoka declined to comment on the matter saying his boss was concentrating on national issues affecting the country.
"All the robust debate speaks to the democracy that exists in the MDC. The party does not speak democracy, it lives democracy," Tamborinyoka said.
Source - Online