Youth Minister Tinoda Machakaire threatens lawsuits after people ask about missing cars. The government bought 17 vehicles but only received seven, according to official reports. Human rights activist Fadzayi Mahere asked simple questions about the whereabouts of the other ten cars. The minister attacked Mahere instead of giving straight answers. He hired lawyers to prevent people from inquiring about public funds.
Government audit reports indicate that something suspicious occurred with the car purchase. Machakaire ordered 17 vehicles from a local dealer for his ministry. Only seven cars arrived at the government offices. Ten expensive vehicles disappeared somewhere between the dealer and the ministry. Nobody knows what happened to the missing cars worth thousands of dollars.
Mahere asked reasonable questions about tax problems and political meddling. She wanted the minister to explain where taxpayer money went. Machakaire called her questions mean and hurtful. He demanded that she apologize publicly and retract her statements. The minister sued her personally rather than answering as a government official.
Critics say Machakaire acts scared of basic accountability. Strong leaders answer tough questions about public spending. Weak politicians hide behind lawyers and court cases. The minister refuses to explain what happened to expensive government property. His legal threats make him look guilty of wrongdoing.
This case highlights issues with government transparency nationwide. Ministers should be prepared to answer questions about missing funds and equipment. Lawsuits cannot fix damaged reputations or missing vehicles. Citizens deserve honest answers about how their tax money gets spent.
Government audit reports indicate that something suspicious occurred with the car purchase. Machakaire ordered 17 vehicles from a local dealer for his ministry. Only seven cars arrived at the government offices. Ten expensive vehicles disappeared somewhere between the dealer and the ministry. Nobody knows what happened to the missing cars worth thousands of dollars.
Mahere asked reasonable questions about tax problems and political meddling. She wanted the minister to explain where taxpayer money went. Machakaire called her questions mean and hurtful. He demanded that she apologize publicly and retract her statements. The minister sued her personally rather than answering as a government official.
Critics say Machakaire acts scared of basic accountability. Strong leaders answer tough questions about public spending. Weak politicians hide behind lawyers and court cases. The minister refuses to explain what happened to expensive government property. His legal threats make him look guilty of wrongdoing.
This case highlights issues with government transparency nationwide. Ministers should be prepared to answer questions about missing funds and equipment. Lawsuits cannot fix damaged reputations or missing vehicles. Citizens deserve honest answers about how their tax money gets spent.