Patrick Chinamasa

Patrick Chinamasa
The Right Honourable
Patrick Chinamasa
Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs of Zimbabwe
Incumbent
Assumed office
July 2000
President Robert Mugabe
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai
Deputy Jessie Majome
Minister of Finance of Zimbabwe
Acting
In office
7 January 2009 – 13 February 2009
President Robert Mugabe
Preceded by Samuel Mumbengegwi
Succeeded by Tendai Biti
Personal details
Born 25 January 1947 (1947-01-25) (age 64)
Southern Rhodesia
Political party Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front
Spouse(s) Monica Chinamasa
Children Gamuchirai Chinamasa

Patrick Antony Chinamasa is a Zimbabwean politician, currently serving as the Minister of Justice.[1]

Contents

Career

A leading member of the ruling ZANU-PF party, Chinamasa became first deputy Agriculture Minister, and then Attorney General of Zimbabwe; he also holds the role of Leader of the Zimbabwean Parliament.

Since his appointment, many Zimbabwean judges have resigned, complaining of political pressure.[2] On February 9, 2001 after Chief Justice Anthony Gubbay took early retirement at his suggestion,[3] Chinamasa held meetings with senior Justices Ahmed Ebrahim Nicholas (the last white justice on the Zimbabwean Court), and told them for their own safety to leave.[4]

In 2002, following what Chinamasa considered lenient conviction of three United States citizens caught and convicted of smuggling arms in an aircraft, Zimbabwean High Court judge Fergus Blackie brought successful charges against Chinamasa for a conviction of “scandalising the court.” Chinamasa had Blackie immediately arrested on charges of "corruption," on the grounds of having decided the case of a white woman improperly (on the basis of an alleged adulterous relationship and racist bias), and without the support of the other judge that was sitting with him on the matter.[5] After the case closed, Chinamasa declared various NGO's illegal, including leading Human Rights organisation the Amani Trust which provides support to victims of torture; and was reportedly accused of working with the British government to unseat President Robert Mugabe and destabilize the nation.[6]

On December 17, 2004, Chinamasa, who had been the Secretary for Legal Affairs of ZANU-PF, was removed from the party's Politburo.[7] In 2005, Chinamasa was ejected from his post as Justice Minister;[3] however, six months later he was returned to the post.

In September 2006, Chinamasa was cleared by a judge of trying to pervert the course of justice. Chinamasa was accused of trying to stop a prosecution witness, James Kaunye, from testifying in a case against the Minister of State for National Security, Didymus Mutasa, who had been accused of inciting public violence.[2]

He is among host of individuals not allowed to travel to the United States because the US government feels he has worked to undermine democracy in Zimbabwe.[8]

Chinamasa and Labor Minister Nicholas Goche met with Tendai Biti (MDC-T) and Welshman Ncube (MDC-M), Secretaries General of their respective Movement for Democratic Change factions, in Pretoria, South Africa on June 16, 2007. South African President Thabo Mbeki, appointed by the Southern African Development Community, presided over the negotiations which sought to end economic sanctions on Zimbabwe.[1]

Chinamasa was nominated as ZANU-PF's candidate for the House of Assembly seat from Makoni Central in the March 2008 parliamentary election,[9][10] but he was defeated.[10][11] Chinamasa received 4 050 votes against 7,060 for John Nyamande of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).[11]

Within ZANU-PF, Chinamasa has been seen as an ally of Emmerson Mnangagwa since 2004.[12] As of 2008, Chinamasa is the Chairman of ZANU-PF's Information and Publicity Sub-Committee,[12][13] and in that capacity he acted as spokesman for ZANU-PF in the period following the 2008 presidential and parliamentary election. In this respect, he was viewed as taking over the roles of Minister of Information and Publicity Sikhanyiso Ndlovu and ZANU-PF Secretary for Information and Publicity Nathan Shamuyarira.[12]

Along with Goche, Chinamasa was one of the negotiators sent by ZANU-PF to the talks between political parties that began in Pretoria on July 10, 2008, following Mugabe's disputed re-election.[14]

Chinamasa was appointed to the Senate by Mugabe on August 25, 2008.[15] On January 7, 2009, The Herald reported that Chinamasa had been appointed as Acting Minister of Finance following the dismissal of Samuel Mumbengegwi, who no longer held a seat in Parliament.[16] In this position, Chinamasa took a historic step in the ongoing hyperinflation crisis in Zimbabwe, announcing that all Zimbabweans would be allowed to conduct business in any currency as of the end of January 2009.[17]

When the ZANU-PF–MDC national unity government was sworn in on February 13, 2009, Chinamasa was retained as Minister of Justice.[18]

Farms

In February 2003, Chinamasa sent the police to arrest Peter Baker, a white farmer who had refused to vacate his farm, Rocklands, in favour of the Minister after successfully challenging its seizure in court. Eight months after the seizure, the farm's water supply has been squandered, undermining its future productivity and that of the neighbouring farms.[19]

In September 2003 Rosemary evicted white farmer Richard Yates from his 800-hectare tobacco farm Tsukumai Farm at Headlands, located east of Harare. Although the Chinamasas paid some compensation, Yates is still awaiting final payment and still considers the farm his in an interview with the Daily Telegraph. The following year Rosemary won the Zimbabwean Tobacco grower of the year award, together with a Z$24million prize and trophy as the 2004/2005 top grower at a ceremony in Harare on July 29. British MP Kate Hoey, who made a fact-finding visit to Zimbabwe earlier in the year, said the award was shocking: "It is like someone stealing a race horse and winning the Grand National.”[20] As a result, London based British American Tobacco came under pressure to stop its Zimbabwean associate company sponsoring the award, which it did the following year.

Quotations

Asked whether the will of the Zimbabwean people would be subverted should Mugabe lose, Chinamasa said: "If people attempted to unfree themselves, moves would be made to free them."[citation needed]

Personal life

Married to Rosemary (born circa 1950), the couples children include:

References

  1. ^ a b Zimbabwe Police Seize Opposition Leader's Passport VOA News
  2. ^ a b Court clears Zimbabwe's minister BBC News– 4 September 2006
  3. ^ a b Mugabe dumps his hardline disciples Telegraph.co.uk– 5 January 2005
  4. ^ Zimbabwe The countdown to Chaos– 2001
  5. ^ http://www.icjcanada.org/en/news_archive/news_blackie.pdf
  6. ^ Zimbabwe: Rights under siege: State intimidation of Human Rights NGO Amani Trust. | Amnesty International
  7. ^ Constantine Chimakure, "Mugabe fires Moyo", Zimbabwe Daily Mirror (zimbabwesituation.com), December 18, 2004.
  8. ^ US Dept. of Treasury [1] (accessed 02/07/2008)
  9. ^ "Zimbabwe: Zanu-PF Names Poll Candidates", The Herald (allAfrica.com), February 15, 2008.
  10. ^ a b "Is the ZEC sitting on results?", AFP (IOL), March 31, 2008.
  11. ^ a b Mutongi Gava, "VP Mujuru not defeated", newzimbabwe.com, March 31, 2008.
  12. ^ a b c "Zimbabwe: Mnangagwa Running Zanu PF Campaign", Zimbabwe Independent (allAfrica.com), May 8, 2008.
  13. ^ "Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF says to launch run-off campaign when ZEC sets date", Xinhua (People's Daily Online), May 15, 2008.
  14. ^ Barry Bearak, "Zimbabwe opponents begin talking about talks", International Herald Tribune, July 10, 2008.
  15. ^ "President Appoints Ministers", The Herald (allAfrica.com), August 25, 2008.
  16. ^ "Mugabe appoints acting ministers: report", Sapa-AFP (IOL), January 7, 2009.
  17. ^ "Zimbabwe abandons its currency". BBC News. 2009-01-07. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/africa/7859033.stm. Retrieved 2010-08-24. 
  18. ^ "Cabinet sworn in amid chaotic scenes", Newzimbabwe.com, February 13, 2009.
  19. ^ Rough justice as Mugabe's man grabs second farm Telegraph.co.uk– 19th October, 2003
  20. ^ SW Radio Africa– wall of shame
  21. ^ LinkedIn: Chengetai Chinamasa
  22. ^ allAfrica.com: Zimbabwe: Zanu-PF, MDC Negotiators Mourn Chinamasa's Son (Page 1 of 1)
  23. ^ Accuity

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