News / National
G40 challenges Mnangagwa legitimacy
07 Feb 2018 at 06:52hrs | Views
MEMBERS of Zanu-PF's G40 faction, who are coalescing to form a new party, New Patriotic Front, have formally petitioned the African Union and Sadc challenging the legitimacy of their arch-rival President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
The 79-page dossier urging the continental body not to recognise Mnangagwa's government on the grounds that it was born out of a military intervention was yesterday formally served by the new political party's lawyer, South African Marius van Niekerk.
The petition was received by chairperson of the Sadc Organ on Politics, Defence and Security and Angola President Joào Lourenco, chairperson of the African Union Commission Moussaka Faki Mahamat, chairperson of Sadc South African President Jacob Zuma, Sadc executive secretary Stergomena Lawrence Tax, and the outgoing AU chairperson Alpha Conde of Guinea.
Most of the copies seen by NewsDay were received between February 2 and yesterday.
The NPF is pleading with Sadc and the continental body not to recognise Mnangagwa, who came into power following a military operation against former President Robert Mugabe in November last year .
Mugabe resigned following the military operation code named Operation Restore Legacy, but former Higher Education minister Jonathan Moyo claimed the veteran politician was forced to resign by the military. He added Mnangagwa should not be recognised by the international community.
The dossier contains minutes between Mugabe and the military's top brass after he was put under house arrest.
The 79-page dossier urging the continental body not to recognise Mnangagwa's government on the grounds that it was born out of a military intervention was yesterday formally served by the new political party's lawyer, South African Marius van Niekerk.
The petition was received by chairperson of the Sadc Organ on Politics, Defence and Security and Angola President Joào Lourenco, chairperson of the African Union Commission Moussaka Faki Mahamat, chairperson of Sadc South African President Jacob Zuma, Sadc executive secretary Stergomena Lawrence Tax, and the outgoing AU chairperson Alpha Conde of Guinea.
Most of the copies seen by NewsDay were received between February 2 and yesterday.
The NPF is pleading with Sadc and the continental body not to recognise Mnangagwa, who came into power following a military operation against former President Robert Mugabe in November last year .
Mugabe resigned following the military operation code named Operation Restore Legacy, but former Higher Education minister Jonathan Moyo claimed the veteran politician was forced to resign by the military. He added Mnangagwa should not be recognised by the international community.
The dossier contains minutes between Mugabe and the military's top brass after he was put under house arrest.
Source - newsday