Zimbabwe names its UN ambassador new Foreign Affairs minister to fill vacancies after Covid-19 deaths
What you need to know:
- President Mnangagwa redeployed Zimbabwe’s ambassador to the United Nations, Fraderick Shava, to replace the late Foreign Affairs minister Retired Lieutenant General Sibusiso Moyo .
Harare. Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa has appointed a top diplomat as the new Foreign Affairs ministers as he moved to replace members of his Cabinet that succumbed to Covid-19 last month.
President Mnangagwa redeployed Zimbabwe’s ambassador to the United Nations, Fraderick Shava, to replace the late Foreign Affairs minister Retired Lieutenant General Sibusiso Moyo .
He also appointed a new Transport minister as well as three deputy ministers for Information, Foreign Affairs and Transport to fill vacant posts.
Zimbabwe last month lost three ministers to Covid-19, which brought the number of those that have succumbed to the pandemic to four since the first case was recorded last year.
The appointment of a new Foreign Affairs minister was keenly awaited as the country is trying to reset relations with the international community after nearly two decades of isolation.
Critics, however, say Dr Shava was a wrong choice given his criminal record following conviction for perjury.
The former ambassador to China was jailed for nine months by the High Court after he was caught up in a scandal involving the reselling of cars.
A number of Cabinet ministers and government officials were involved in the 1980s scandal, but Dr Shava was pardoned by the late former president Robert Mugabe before serving any time.
Alex Magaisa, a Zimbabwean law academic at the University of Kent in United Kingdom, said the appointment could have been influenced by re-engagement imperatives with the West.
"(President) Mnangagwa hopes (Dr Shava) has built solid links with Western diplomats in New York and that his network will help him in the re-engagement efforts," Dr Magaisa said.
"It may be that (Dr) Shava will bring in a new dimension to the foreign engagements."
After a thawing of relations between Zimbabwe and the West following a military coup that toppled Mr Mugabe, tensions have been rising of late because of concerns about President Mnangagwa’s commitment to reforms.
The United Kingdom last week slapped travel bans and asset freezes on four security chiefs it accused of engineering violence that led to the deaths of protestors.
It was the first set of punitive measures against individuals by the UK as it began to roll out an independent sanctions regime against Zimbabwe after pulling out of the European Union (EU) at the end of last year.
The EU, which has maintained targeted sanctions against Zimbabwe since 2002 for alleged electoral fraud and human rights violations, is expected to renew the embargo this month.
Other countries that imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe are the United States, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
Meanwhile, Zimbabwe’s ambassador to Mozambique Retired Liutenant General Douglas Nyikayaramba has died of Covid-19, state television said on Tuesday.
As Zimbabwe National Army chief of staff, Ambassador Nyikayaramba was instrumental in the coup that toppled Mr Mugabe in 2017.