24 May 2012
 
New Zimbabwe Header
PM draws fire over China delegation size
No vacancy for Zanu PF leader: Gumbo
UN envoy gets Mugabe history lesson
Chitungwiza councillor 'sold 388 stands'
MORE NEWS
Econet secures US$363m loan
Mimosa loses 75,000t ore to mine fire
MORE BUSINESS
'Unpatriotic' Roki gets axe warning
Roki and Maneta: how 'stuff hit the fan'
MORE SHOWBIZ
H'landers stretch lead as Dynamos held
Frimpong joins great trek to Harare
MORE SPORTS
Why Zuma's Spear should stay up
Zuma painting an attack on blacks
MORE OPINION
 
Facebook: reward for innovation
MORE COLUMNISTS
 

WikiLeaks probe report out in March: Tomana

17/01/2011 00:00:00
by German Press Agency (DPA)
 
No going back ... Johannes Tomana
 
RELATED STORIES
Chiwenga rules out WikiLeaks probe
Branson denies Mugabe money offer
WikiLeaks: Near punch up at MDC-T NEC
Richard Branson and I: Jonathan Moyo
MDC-T 'suspends' Gutu over US cables
Cooperate or perish, Moyo tells plotters
Hungwe, Moyo traded secrets for sanctions
What US cables reveal about Zim politics
WikiLeaks: Generals face court martial
Mnangagwa ‘disdain’ for Moyo, AIPPA
Mnangagwa, Moyo breakaway plot
WikiLeaks outs US, SA double agent
WikiLeaks: Moyo sues Daily News
Mnangagwa 'held Mugabe by collar'
Rautenbach’s Zanu PF headache
Moyo ‘planted false stories’: ex-editor
France ‘pressed’ for sanctions removal
UK coordinated Marange ban efforts
EU gets ‘creative’ over sanctions: WikiLeaks
Tomana’s WikiLeaks panel revealed
WikiLeaks commission puzzle continues
Tomana denies WikiLeaks probe plan

A LEGAL team set up by attorney general started investigating the role of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and others in their discussions with US diplomats, which were leaked by self-proclaimed whistle blower website WikiLeaks.

“Quite clearly ... WikiLeaks appears to be generally accepted as an authentic source of information. If they (Tsvangirai and his party leadership) have (committed an offence), I have an obligation to prosecute,” Attorney General Johannes Tomana said in an interview.

“I have asked (for) legal opinion from experts to see if I can proceed,” he said, adding that the team of six lawyers was expected to give its recommendations by end-March.

WikiLeaks on November 28 began publishing a cache of secret diplomatic cables dispatched from US embassies worldwide to the State Department in Washington.

The documents quoted several Zimbabweans in secret conversations with US embassy officials, and the legal team will examine whether or not there was a conspiracy to undermine national security or commit treason.

According to WikiLeaks, the cables indicated that Tsvangirai and other leaders in his party suggested that Washington should contribute to a fund to buy off security service chiefs in order to bring about a regime change in Zimbabwe.

The cables also exposed Washington’s doubts about Tsvangirai’s leadership.

While the man who had led democratic opposition to President Robert Mugabe was “the indispensable element for opposition success” he risked becoming “possibly an albatross around their necks once in power,” the then US ambassador to Zimbabwe wrote in 2007.

Tomana said he was not worried that probing Tsvangirai would create more tensions in the country’s fragile coalition government.

“We are not supposed to be protecting any criminal. It does not matter what station of life they occupy in life. Nobody has an obligation to protect them,” said Tomana.

Nelson Chamisa, Tsvangirai’s party spokesman, said: “You cannot have (a) commission of inquiry based on gossip and hearsay. WikiLeaks is not in any way a credible source of information.” He added that this was merely “a political gimmick and we are going to resist it. We are not going to be part of that charade.”



Advertisement


 
Email this to a friend Printable Version Discuss This Story
 
Share this article:

Digg it

Del.icio.us

Reddit

Newsvine

Nowpublic

Stumbleupon

Face Book

Myspace

Fark
 
 
 
 
 
RSS NewsTicker