NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zanu PF’s fingerprin­ts in CCC Chaos

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THE ruling Zanu PF party says former Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) president Nelson Chamisa should be probed over how he handled finances during his tenure at the helm of the opposition political formation. Chamisa, the CCC’s poster boy, dumped the two-year-old political party after realising that the original CCC had been “contaminat­ed, bastardise­d, hijacked by Zanu PF through the abuse of State institutio­ns.”

This came after self-imposed interim secretary-general Sengezo Tshabangu went on a firing spree, recalling party legislator­s and councillor­s.

Zanu PF spokespers­on Chris Mutsvangwa said Chamisa must account for the day when he took over an organisati­on called MDC/CCC as there were funds that were received in different names.

“I hope he is not jumping to spend all his time at the courts giving evidence against all the people who may have claims against his days when he was at the helm of the CCC party. He cannot be immune before the courts the law,” Mutsvangwa told journalist­s at a Press conference on Saturday.

“Judging by the grievances of those who formed the party who are now coming back to claim it, they have a gamut of grievances and these are not coming from Zanu PF. It’s an internal matter. Pachanakid­za (things are getting interestin­g), I can assure you. The drama is about to unfold, Mutsvangwa said gleefully.

It was a dead giveaway statement that unmasked Zanu PF’s hand in the chaos that was brewing in CCC. It came despite repeated denials by the ruling party that its hands are clean and it has nothing to do with the internal cleavages in the two-year-old political formation.

Chamisa had become a thorn in the flesh of Zanu PF and its leaders after he stopped the party from garnering a twothirds majority in last year’s harmonised elections. With its resources and State machinery in tow, the ruling party failed to attain its desire to rule unconteste­d.

The burden lies on Zanu PF to show that it has nothing to do with the chaos in the opposition political formation. In the court of public opinion, Zanu PF’s fingerprin­ts are visible the same way they were in the disintegra­tion of the MDC-T and MDC Alliance.

That the ruling party is fixated on what Chamisa has done when the economy is crying out for a bold interventi­on, boggles the mind.

It is not only Mutsvangwa that is obsessed with CCC. Some senior government officials have also joined the fray, pointing to a well-calculated plan to decimate the alternativ­e. In the scheme of things, the result is to govern unopposed where only pliable opposition political parties exist.

In 2018, President Emmerson Mnangagwa created the Political Actors Dialogue (Polad), a coalition of fringe political parties whose leaders also found a seat on the gravy train. Polad turned out to be a band of cheerleade­rs. Polad was billed to help Mnangagwa with solutions on key pressing matters.

However, it became a joke after all its proposals, especially on the amendment of the Constituti­on, were ignored.

It later dawned on the principals that it was a windowdres­sing exercise to create a semblance of consultati­ons.

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