Zimbabwe’s new president Emmerson Mnangagwa swore in his cabinet
on Monday, with allies defending him against criticism for giving top
posts to the generals who helped his rise to power.
Sworn
in as president on November 24 after 93-year-old Robert Mugabe quit
following a de facto military coup, Mnangagwa has also come under fire
for bringing back several faces from the Mugabe era, including Patrick
Chinamasa as finance minister.
Air Marshall Perrance
Shiri, who was handed the sensitive land portfolio, defended his
appointment in remarks to reporters after a simple ceremony to take
oaths of office.
“Who says military people should never
be politicians? I‘m a Zimbabwean so I have every right to participate
in government,” he said.
Shiri is feared and loathed by
many Zimbabweans as the former commander of the North Korean-trained ‘5
Brigade’ that played a central role in ethnic massacres in Matabeleland
in 1983 in which an estimated 20,000 people were killed.
Land issue
Land
is a central political issue in the southern African country, where
reforms in the early 2000s led to the violent seizure of thousands of
white-owned farms and hastened an economic collapse.
Another
military figure is foreign minister Sibusiso Moyo, whom most
Zimbabweans remember as the khaki-clad general who went on state
television in the early hours of November 15 to announce the military
takeover.
He declined to discuss the cabinet with Reuters, saying he had yet to get into his new office.
Assembling a cabinet has not been without mishaps.
Mnangawa
dropped his initial pick as education minister on Saturday, 24 hours
after appointing him, after a public outcry and reshuffled two others to
meet a Constitutional requirement that all but five ministers be
Members of Parliament.
This has left the information
portfolio vacant after he named Chris Mutsvangwa, the influential leader
of the war veterans’ association, as special advisor to the president.
Mutsvangwa
has defended the cabinet, which at 22 is smaller than Mugabe’s
33-strong team, saying the two military appointments were not unique to
Zimbabwe.
He also said Mnangagwa had “engaged” the
opposition MDC party about taking part in an “inclusive” government, but
its leader Morgan Tsvangirai had blocked it — a claim disputed by the MDC.
“As
far as we are concerned there was no contact whatsoever between
President Mnangagwa, ZANU-PF and our party regarding the possibility of
inclusion or involvement of our members in the government,” MDC Vice
President Nelson Chamisa told Reuters.
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