News / National
Mnangagwa issues Zanu-PF chairman a 7-day ultimatum
05 Jul 2014 at 15:53hrs | Views
JUSTICE, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa's wife, Auxilia and four of her colleagues have issued a seven-day ultimatum to Zanu-PF Midlands provincial chairman Jason Machaya and two co-accused party members to produce evidence defending the $50 million defamation lawsuit.
The five party members, all from the Midlands, took Machaya and his election agent Douglas Kanengoni and Kudakwashe Bhasikiti from Masvingo to court accusing them of defamation in the run-up to last year's July 31 harmonised elections.
The trio compiled a document after the party's Midlands provincial elections accusing Mnangagwa, a Zanu-PF central committee member, former provincial chairman July Moyo, Mackenzie Ncube, Douglas Tapfuma and Owen Ncube of vote-buying, rigging, fraud, lying, deceit and hypocrisy during the electoral process.
Machaya, who is the Provincial Minister of State, retained the provincial party chairmanship after defeating Larry Mavhima, who was reportedly being backed by the Mnangagwa group.
The five party members are each demanding $10 million from the three accused cadres over a letter allegedly authored by Kanengoni.
Through their lawyer, Valentine Mutatu of Mutatu and Partners, the five party members on Thursday filed a chamber application for an order compelling the trio to produce their evidence at the Bulawayo High Court.
The order drafted under case number 1445/14 before High Court judge Justice Nokuthula Moyo, instructs Machaya, Kanengoni and Bhasikiti to "make discovery within seven days of service of this order".
Bhasikiti is the Provincial Minister of State for Masvingo and was in charge of the elections as the Zanu-PF team leader.
Lawyers say a notice of discovery entails that the three respondents are supposed to file papers they are going to use during trial within the given seven-day timeframe.
According to Mutatu, Machaya and his co-accused were given 24 days to furnish the court with the discoveries but have not done so.
"On May, 2, 2014, the respondents were duly served with a notice to make discovery in terms of the rules.
"The respondents have failed or neglected to file the discovery affidavits in terms of the time limits permitted by the rules, despite having been served," reads part of the affidavit.
Mutatu said the chamber application compels the trio to file their defence papers failure to which another chamber application would be made to strike out their defence and the matter would go for trial unopposed.
However, the trio's legal representative, Nelson Mashizha of Sachikonye-Ushe Legal Practitioners, yesterday said his clients had already filed the said papers.
"Mutatu's application has been overtaken by events. When his application was made we had already sprung into action. We've the papers," said Mashizha.
He, however, declined to comment on the specific dates that the papers were filed and what they contained.
In their letter of demand in November last year written by Mutatu, Mnangagwa and her colleagues argued that the allegations made by Kanengoni were recklessly defamatory and threatened their political careers.
The five party members, all from the Midlands, took Machaya and his election agent Douglas Kanengoni and Kudakwashe Bhasikiti from Masvingo to court accusing them of defamation in the run-up to last year's July 31 harmonised elections.
The trio compiled a document after the party's Midlands provincial elections accusing Mnangagwa, a Zanu-PF central committee member, former provincial chairman July Moyo, Mackenzie Ncube, Douglas Tapfuma and Owen Ncube of vote-buying, rigging, fraud, lying, deceit and hypocrisy during the electoral process.
Machaya, who is the Provincial Minister of State, retained the provincial party chairmanship after defeating Larry Mavhima, who was reportedly being backed by the Mnangagwa group.
The five party members are each demanding $10 million from the three accused cadres over a letter allegedly authored by Kanengoni.
Through their lawyer, Valentine Mutatu of Mutatu and Partners, the five party members on Thursday filed a chamber application for an order compelling the trio to produce their evidence at the Bulawayo High Court.
The order drafted under case number 1445/14 before High Court judge Justice Nokuthula Moyo, instructs Machaya, Kanengoni and Bhasikiti to "make discovery within seven days of service of this order".
Bhasikiti is the Provincial Minister of State for Masvingo and was in charge of the elections as the Zanu-PF team leader.
Lawyers say a notice of discovery entails that the three respondents are supposed to file papers they are going to use during trial within the given seven-day timeframe.
According to Mutatu, Machaya and his co-accused were given 24 days to furnish the court with the discoveries but have not done so.
"On May, 2, 2014, the respondents were duly served with a notice to make discovery in terms of the rules.
"The respondents have failed or neglected to file the discovery affidavits in terms of the time limits permitted by the rules, despite having been served," reads part of the affidavit.
Mutatu said the chamber application compels the trio to file their defence papers failure to which another chamber application would be made to strike out their defence and the matter would go for trial unopposed.
However, the trio's legal representative, Nelson Mashizha of Sachikonye-Ushe Legal Practitioners, yesterday said his clients had already filed the said papers.
"Mutatu's application has been overtaken by events. When his application was made we had already sprung into action. We've the papers," said Mashizha.
He, however, declined to comment on the specific dates that the papers were filed and what they contained.
In their letter of demand in November last year written by Mutatu, Mnangagwa and her colleagues argued that the allegations made by Kanengoni were recklessly defamatory and threatened their political careers.
Source - chronicle