Monday , 6 May 2024
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The new national unity Prime minister, Eugene Mangalaza, must put a new government in place within the next days.

Eugene Mangalaza has one week to put a new government in place

The political mobility leaders invited the national unity Prime minister, Eugene Mangalaza, to complete the nomination of the members of his government before Friday November 13th. The new Prime minister will anyhow have to wait for proposals stemming from the four mobility leaders and from the concerned entities. 

 

Of the 31 members of the Transition’s new government, each mobility will be entitled to designate 6 ministers, while 7 seats will be granted to various other entities qualified as “other concerned groups” by the binding Maputo agreements amended by the Additional Act of Addis Ababa.  

 

The new government’s main mission will be, first and foremost, the settling of political rivalries in order to ease the transitional process. “We must make a symphony out of yelling” argued the Prime minister, Eugene Mangalaza. This anthropologist is displaying his determination to address his mission. “I know the country and the people” he insured.  

 

The distribution of the different ministerial seats still proves rather complicated though. Mobilities are still battling to conquer the so-called sovereignty ministries, that is to say the Interior, the Foreign Affairs, the Defense, the Justice, the Finance, and probably also the ministries for Communication and Mines. The next challenge is to be hard. 

Eugene Mangalaza has one week to put a new government in place 

The new national unity Prime minister, Eugene Mangalaza, must put a new government in place within the next days. 

The political mobility leaders invited the national unity Prime minister, Eugene Mangalaza, to complete the nomination of the members of his government before Friday November 13th. The new Prime minister will anyhow have to wait for proposals stemming from the four mobility leaders and from the concerned entities. 

 

Of the 31 members of the Transition’s new government, each mobility will be entitled to designate 6 ministers, while 7 seats will be granted to various other entities qualified as “other concerned groups” by the binding Maputo agreements amended by the Additional Act of Addis Ababa.  

 

The new government’s main mission will be, first and foremost, the settling of political rivalries in order to ease the transitional process. “We must make a symphony out of yelling” argued the Prime minister, Eugene Mangalaza. This anthropologist is displaying his determination to address his mission. “I know the country and the people” he insured.  

 

The distribution of the different ministerial seats still proves rather complicated though. Mobilities are still battling to conquer the so-called sovereignty ministries, that is to say the Interior, the Foreign Affairs, the Defense, the Justice, the Finance, and probably also the ministries for Communication and Mines. The next challenge is to be hard.