Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

‘MILITARY DOES NOT RUN ZANU-PF’ 17-yr-old girl Party will accept poll outcome, VP Mohadi says bashes chief

- Mashudu Netsianda Whinsley Masara

VICE President Kembo Mohadi has dismissed claims by some opposition parties that the Zanu-PF Government is under the control of the military and will use the army to resist handing over power in the event that the party loses the forthcomin­g harmonised elections.

In an interview with The Chronicle yesterday, VP Mohadi said Zanu-PF draws its mandate from the people through the ballot box and would accept any outcome of the polls.

“Zanu-PF is not run by the military and we are not in the barracks. Of course, President Emmerson Mnangagwa is a trained soldier, I am a trained soldier and VP (Constantin­o) Chiwenga is also a trained soldier because that was our generation. We all went to war because it was a requiremen­t then to go and fight but you can’t then say we are a military Government because we have all since retired from the military,” he said.

“Zanu-PF is not the one that has the power but the power lies with the people of Zimbabwe and if the people vote us out they would have rejected us. If you lose an election you would have lost and if you win you would have won. It’s simple as that”.

VP Mohadi said Operation Restore Legacy, which culminated in the new dispensati­on, had the blessings of Zimbabwean­s who took to the streets calling for the former President Robert Mugabe to relinquish power.

“Zimbabwe has never experience­d any coup. You call us a junta government and I don’t know what you mean because if you are talking of Operation Restore Legacy, it was not the army that took over, there was an uprising by the people and everyone was saying Mugabe must go, Parliament equally said Mugabe must go and those are the people that removed him from power,” he said.

The VP said the army did not force Mr Mugabe to resign.

“It was not the army. If it were the army they would have arrested him (Mr Mugabe). He is at his house with his family and everything is going on well.

“He was never molested and I don’t know where you are getting these ideas that we are a junta government,” he said.

Mr Mugabe convened a Press conference in March to a selected group of local and foreign media organisati­ons and claimed that he was “unconstitu­tionally” deposed through a coup despite resigning ahead of imminent impeachmen­t on November 21 last year.

He further claimed he was ready to talk to President Mnangagwa to right what he claimed was an “illegality.”

Mr Mugabe resigned after the military intervened to arrest a fast deteriorat­ing socio-economic and political environmen­t in the country, which naturally triggered the elevation of Cde Mnangagwa, who by then had been elected as Zanu-PF’s First Secretary by the ruling party’s Central Committee, to the highest office in the land.

VP Mohadi said the nation is now focusing on preparing for free, fair and credible elections.

He also dismissed claims by the opposition MDC-T and its partners in the Alliance that Zanu-PF has planned to rig the outcome of the watershed plebiscite.

“I don’t know what rigging is all about just as good as I don’t how losing an election is all about. If the opposition is talking about Zanu-PF losing or rigging I don’t know how they arrived at that conclusion. How do we rig an election which is run by an independen­t body?” he asked.

“Zec (Zimbabwe Electoral Commission) is independen­t and there is no Zanu-PF member there who will be rigging elections in its favour.”

VP Mohadi said Zanu-PF and the opposition under the Constituti­on Parliament­ary Committee (Copac), which was mandated with drawing up a new constituti­on for Zimbabwe by the Government of National Unity between 2009 and 2013, agreed to come up with an independen­t electoral body.

“If the opposition has issues pertaining to elections, Zec is there to verify what they don’t understand. We don’t run elections as Zanu-PF. How do we rig something that we don’t run? We are equal participan­ts like them,” said the VP.

Zec chairperso­n Justice Priscilla Chigumba said this year’s elections cannot be rigged as the country’s voting system is foolproof.

She said the fact that the system is tamper-proof should ensure a free, fair and credible election that could not be rigged.

Zec has acquired a 100 percent secure Biometric Voter Registrati­on (BVR) system.

BVR is a new voter registrati­on system which captures an individual’s biometric features and ensures nobody can vote twice.

Justice Chigumba said members of the public with evidence that the voting system could be interferre­d with should bring it forward.

MDC-T leader Adv Nelson Chamisa recently told a rally in Nyanga that if the MDC Alliance did not win the coming elections that would be proof the ruling party had rigged them. He, however, failed to substantia­te his claims.

President Mnangagwa has repeatedly assured the world that the harmonised elections, expected to be held in July this year, would be free, fair and credible.

The Government has invited observers from all over the world to see for themselves, with President Mnangagwa declaring repeatedly that “Zimbabwe has nothing to hide”.

Western countries like the United Kingdom and United States that were barred by the previous administra­tion have also been invited this year, including Commonweal­th representa­tives.

Opposition activists and Government critics, most notably fugitive former Cabinet Minister Professor Jonathan Moyo, have resorted to referring to the ruling party as Junta PF on social media.

The move is apparently meant to lay a foundation for a protest based on army interferen­ce if Zanu PF wins the elections.—@mashnets A 17-YEAR-OLD girl smashed a beer bottle across the face of a Chief in Binga after he reprimande­d her for being skimpily dressed.

Chief Siabuwa (52) said he sustained a cut under his right eye from the assault.

He was stitched at Siabuwa Clinic before being referred to Binga District Hospital for further treatment.

Ms Tlou Dube, who recently relocated to Zewula village, under chief Siabuwa, from Bulawayo, was walking with a friend only identified as Mbimbi when she committed the cultural taboo.

The incident occurred last Wednesday at Siabuwa Business Centre and was reported to the police.

Chief Siabuwa said he was at the business centre when he saw the two teenagers who were dressed in “very short dresses” and approached them to counsel them on proper dressing to preserve their values and morals.

“As I spoke to them, Dube walked away, telling her friend to walk on and not listen to nonsense. I told her to go if she felt I spoke nonsense and leave the other girl to listen to what I had to say. I re-introduced myself and even produced my identifica­tion card thinking maybe she was not aware of who I was.

“She continued to yell at Mbimbi and returned to where we stood, picked up an empty bottle of beer from the ground and hit me right in the face. Well, I hope the teenagers will get real counsellin­g to restore their values and morals which they seem not to have at all,” he said.

Chief Siabuwa said he had found the teenagers’ behaviour grossly disrespect­ful and irritating and had tried to talk sense to them.

“The teenagers were walking in a public place, indecently dressed and so I tried to warn them for their own protection because that could result in them being abused by men. In our society and culture, females don’t dress in the manner they did,” said the area chief.

Chief Senator Siansali said Ms Tlou recently relocated from Bulawayo to live with her grandmothe­r in Zewula village.

He said the girl was probably not aware of the difference in culture and morals between Bulawayo and Binga.

“She also may have not been aware of the importance of the chief’s status as a community leader. Their dressing didn’t suit our Binga community and the chief tried to warn them to protect them as that is one of a traditiona­l leader’s roles in the community.

“The teenagers’ behaviour was unfortunat­e. It’s unheard of in our culture.

“It may have been a result of influence from morally decadent cultures from other countries. As a nation, we need to reform ourselves to avoid becoming what we are not,” said Chief Siansali.—@winnie_masara

 ??  ?? Vice President Kembo Mohadi
Vice President Kembo Mohadi
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Chief Siabuwa
Chief Siabuwa
 ??  ?? President Emmerson Mnangagwa
President Emmerson Mnangagwa

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