/ 30 December 2004

Mugabe’s top official arrested on spy charges

A senior official in President Robert Mugabe’s party and Zimbabwe’s new ambassador to Mozambique have been arrested on charges of spying, daily papers reported on Thursday.

Phillip Chiyangwa, a provincial chairperson of Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF) and Godfrey Dzvairo, newly appointed Zimbabwe’s ambassador to Mozambique, are being charged under the country’s Official Secrets law.

They are alleged to have passed on Zimbabwe’s state secrets to as yet unnamed foreign countries. Chiyangwa, who is also a lawmaker and Dzvairo, former consul-general at Zimbabwe’s embassy in South Africa, are charged along with Zanu-PF’s director for external affairs, Itai Marchi and Tendi Matambanadzo, a director of a locally owned bank, Metropolitan.

The four appeared in court late on Wednesday, according to the state daily Herald and the independent Daily Mirror, but the hearing was held behind closed doors.

Before the court session was closed to the public, Chiyangwa’s lawyers reportedly complained over the ”humiliating” conditions under which the outspoken politician has been held since his arrest by state security some two weeks ago.

His health reportedly ”seriously deteriorated to the extent that he suffered a mild stroke”, according to his lawyer Canaan Dube, quoted by the Daily Mirror.

The lawyers were not immediately available to comment. In February, Chiyangwa, was arrested and spent more than a week in police holding cells on charges of trying to pervert the course of justice in a major banking scam. – Sapa-AFP