Jacob Mudenda Explained

Jacob Mudenda
Office1:Speaker of the National Assembly
Term Start1:3 September 2013
Predecessor1:Lovemore Moyo
Deputy1:Tsitsi Gezi
Birth Place:Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe
Party:ZANU–PF
Residence:Harare, Zimbabwe
Alma Mater:University of South Africa (BA)
University of Zimbabwe (LLB)
Profession:Lawyer, politician

Jacob Francis Nzwidamilimo Mudenda is the current Speaker of the National Assembly of Zimbabwe[1] and a member of the Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF).[2] A longtime schoolteacher and lawyer, Mudenda joined the Zimbabwe political scene after it gained independence from the British in 1980.[3] Mudenda is well known for his relationship with former Zimbabwe president, Robert Mugabe, along with the rise and fall of his political career after the Willowgate scandal.

Background

Jacob Francis Mudenda was born in Zimbabwe.[4] Mudenda earned numerous degrees before joining the workforce. Mudenda earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of South Africa while majoring in English and education. He followed this degree by achieving his Bachelor of Laws honour degree from the University of Zimbabwe. In addition, he went back to school a third time to receive a Postgraduate Diploma in Law from the University of Zimbabwe.[5] After gaining his second diploma from the University of Zimbabwe, Mudenda went on to practice law and teach in Zimbabwe until his decision to enter politics.

Early political career

Upon independence in 1980 from British control, Mudenda was selected by the Mugabe government regime as a district administrator. Through connections to Mugabe personally and good results, Mudenda was soon promoted to provincial administrator and provincial governor. In 1984, after continued success in politics, Mudenda was named resident minister for the government when the position was created. The appointment left Mudenda in charge of the Matabeleland North Province.[6] The new position, as spokesperson for Matabeleland North, the second most populous province in Zimbabwe,[7] continued Mudenda's rise in Mugabe's circle. While holding this position, Mudenda, Mugabe and Zimbabwe as a nation took significant fire for the incident known as Gukurahundi.[8] The incident, from early 1983 to late 1987 left over 20,000 individuals dead, and Mudenda is considered to have been Mugabe's line of contact through the period.[9]

Willowgate scandal and aftermath

See main article: Willowgate. In the late 1980s, Mudenda, along with other members of the Zimbabwe government, were implicated in a scandal involving the illegal sales of cars. Mudenda, along with the other individuals involved, purchased vehicles from a legal importer in Willowvale at a low rate and would sell the vehicles at a highly inflated price.[10] Mugabe, and many other politicians were involved in the investigation. Mudenda was found to have made more than 100,000 Zimbabwe dollars ($51,000) in the purchase and resale of one vehicle.[11] The scandal ended the political careers of many individuals, including Maurice Nyagumbo. Mudenda, however, was able to make his way back into politics after years away from serving as a government official. In his time away from politics, Mudenda spent significant time establishing his law firm. The firm, Mudenda Attorneys Legal Practitioners, still practices in Bulawayo today.[12]

Return to politics

In February, 2013 Mudenda stepped back into the public sphere with his appointment as the chairman of the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC).[13] The return to politics did not come without controversy. Some in Zimbabwe felt that Mudenda's appointment did not follow constitutional procedures.[14] Mudenda's appointment lasted only a short period of time, however, as he was elected the Speaker of the House on July 31 of the same year.[15] On September 3, 2013 Mudenda took his position replacing former Speaker, Lovemore Moyo Mudenda has remained in the same position since his appointment in 2013.

See also

References

  1. Web site: Jacob Mudenda . Pindula. 2018-10-04.
  2. Web site: Jacob Mudenda . Pindula . 2018-10-04.
  3. News: Jacob Mudenda's political rise-fall-and-rise tale. eDuzeNet. Bulawayo24 News. 2018-10-12.
  4. Web site: Jacob Mudenda sworn in as Speaker of Parliament. www.thezimbabwean.co. en-US. 2018-10-24.
  5. Web site: Advocate Jacob Francis Mudenda.
  6. Web site: Jacob Mudenda resigns. Southern Eye. 2018-10-24. 11 January 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190111121638/https://www.southerneye.co.zw/2013/09/30/jacob-mudenda-resigns/. dead.
  7. Web site: Zimbabwe - Matabeleland North. www.zimbabwe-info.com. 2018-10-24.
  8. Book: Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace in Zimbabwe. Breaking the Silence, Building True Peace. Legal Resources Foundation. 1997 .
  9. News: Banned by Mugabe, play about Gukurahundi massacres finally staged. Dzirutwe. MacDonald. Reuters . 1 June 2018 . 2018-10-24 .
  10. Web site: Willowgate Scandal . Pindula . 2018-10-24.
  11. Meldrum. A. 1989. The Corruption Controversy. Africa Report. 34. 36.
  12. News: Law Society bars 40 lawyers among them Mudenda from practising (See some of the names). 2018-05-25. My Zimbabwe News. 2018-12-02.
  13. Salcedo-Albarán. Eduardo. January 2017. Coltan Trafficking Network in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The Global Observatory of Transnational Criminal Networks. 5.
  14. Chiduza . L.. 2015. The Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission: Prospects and challenges for the protection of human rights . Law Democracy & Development . 19.
  15. Dzirutwe. MacDonald. Brock. Joe. Cropley. Ed. 2018-01-01. The inside story of Mugabe's downfall. 10520/EJC-c70dcd83c. New Agenda: South African Journal of Social and Economic Policy . 2018 . 68 . 32–35 . 1607-2820.