NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

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IN response to ‘Zim police in distress’, KWANGWARI says: President Emmerson Mnangagwa is not seeing that he is creating enemies who share a common denominato­r: poverty. Officers from the police, the military, the Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on are all complainin­g that Mnangagwa’s government has wrecked the economy, that their salaries are now worthless. Everyone is pleading poverty, rentals are now pegged in United States dollars, groceries are also now being sold in US dollars, it’s a dog’s breakfast out there. It’s very dangerous to have a disgruntle­d workforce looking over you. Mnangagwa must, for once, improve the welfare of civil servants.

IN response to Zec makes U-turn over elections, PINDIKITI says: This is a calculated move by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, obviously with the powers-that-be. MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa is being dribbled again on this one. Zimbabwe is fast becoming a oneparty State. The current regime is undoing all the steps made towards democratis­ing this country. That is what greed does. President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administra­tion is all driven by greed. If we do not resist this as citizens, we are doomed. Said Martin Luther King Jr, “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” As citizens, we should take ourselves to be the “friends” King meant. Let us speak out against this injustice happening in our country. I salute WeLead leader and human rights activist, young Namatai Kwekweza. I hope there are many of us out there who will see sense in what Kwekweza is saying. Kudos young girl.

IN response to Govt neglecting diplomats, Parly told, PIKIRAYI says: It seems President Emmerson Mnaggagwa’s woes are mounting. Let’s see how he will wriggle his way out of all these challenges. In fact, his administra­tion is the worst thing to happen to Zimbabwe. It’s a shame to have such bureaucrat­s in office, people who do not have a clue on how to resolve the challenges facing the nation. They are used to toting guns and intimidati­ng innocent citizens, let’s see if those guns can intimidate the economy to behave. Mnangagwa has failed his diplomats, has failed the economy, has failed the nation, has failed the security sector, has failed even people who protect him. So what has he done good? What warrants that he continues at the helm as the country’s chief executive. Should he even remain there? Does he even have presidenti­al qualities? Does he even know that he is the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe? Food for thought ...

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