NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zanu PF ‘stole’ independen­ce — Opposition

- BY SILAS NKALA

OPPOSITION parties yesterday lamented that Independen­ce Day is a painful reminder that the freedom war veterans fought for remains elusive. Zimbabwe today marks 44 years of independen­ce from British colonial rule.

The main celebratio­ns will be held in Murambinda, Manicaland with provincial festivitie­s lined up across the country.

Then Prime Minister the late Robert Mugabe’s 1980 Independen­ce Day speech was one of reconcilia­tion, inclusion and freedom for all.

Opposition parties, however, said Mugabe, his successor Emmerson Mnangagwa and Zanu PF have failed to deliver on the promise of a free Zimbabwe for all since 1980.

Zapu leader Sibangiliz­we Nkomo said fallen heroes, who sacrificed their lives, must be turning in their graves in disappoint­ment.

"Independen­ce is painful because it has no freedom,” he said.

“Just a few days ago, we saw people being arrested for booing first lady Auxillia Mnangagwa. Just basic freedom for one to laugh at a leader, you have to be arrested!

“I do not believe that this is what they fought for.”

Nine villagers were detained and later charged with disorderly conduct after they booed the First Lady when she was addressing at Watsomba business centre, Manicaland.

She was in the province donating foodstuffs and other goodies to villagers.

Charges against the nine were later withdrawn on the instructio­n of the First Lady.

Nkomo said there could not be Independen­ce Day festivitie­s in some parts of Matabelela­nd that bore the brunt of the Gukurahund­i massacres.

"Our independen­ce will not be complete unless the issue of Gukurahund­i is addressed,” he said.

“Gukurahund­i is a painful wound in Zimbabwe. It brings bad omen and conflict among Zimbabwean­s. If it is not resolved the nation will not progress. It affects the whole country and not Matabelela­nd only.

“This is because the acts of Gukurahund­i are still there and continuing.”

He also said ordinary people had nothing to celebrate when they see the Zanu PF elite looting the country’s resources.

"The other sad thing is that the liberation war was waged for majority blacks to own land and wealth, but our wealth is being looted out of the country to foreign lands,” Nkomo said.

“The gap between the rich and the poor is ever widening and this is painful. The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer.”

Freedom Alliance spokespers­on Nhlanhla Moses Ncube said the day provided an opportunit­y for the Zanu PF elite to showcase their riches to the poor.

"For this day to be of value to everybody there is need for true democracy, non-tribalism and equal opportunit­y for all,” Ncube said.

“There should be respect for fundamenta­l human rights, political, economic, cultural and religious freedom which the war of independen­ce was about, among other things."

Ncube said the day had been hijacked by Zanu PF.

"However, in all other aspects, the difference is the same. The event is still about Zanu PF and not the nation. It is about how to stay longer in power against the will of the people," he said.

"Only Zanu PF leaders are independen­t in Zimbabwe. They do as they please whether right or wrong.

“It has been the case since 1980 and it is nowhere near changing. It is the unrepentan­t nature of Zanu PF.”

Self-styled Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) interim secretary-general Sengezo Tshabangu faction’s, Charles Moyo, echoed similar sentiments.

“Although we appreciate the effort by the second republic to make sure the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission is on the ground trying to address Gukurahund­i, if this issue is not closed, people of Matabelela­nd in particular will not see independen­ce as practical," Moyo said.

Mthwakazi Republic Party leader, Mqondisi Moyo, said ordinary Zimbabwean­s and government critics were being denied the opportunit­y to enjoy their rights as enshrined in the Constituti­on.

"For independen­ce to be complete, the inalienabl­e right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness must be evident, such is not found in Zimbabwe,” Moyo said.

To derive value in this day for everybody, there must be genuine reconcilia­tion administer­ed through justice and reparation­s for the crimes committed against humanity after independen­ce. “

Zanu PF informatio­n director, Farai Marapira, however, said independen­ce meant a lot to all Zimbabwean­s.

"This importance reverberat­es and resonates across the length and breadth of Zimbabwe. The younger generation needs to be more curious about their history as the President said, a tree cannot grow branches without roots,” Marapira said.

"Independen­ce since 1980 has always been an important occasion for the Zanu PF government. We are all independen­t, we achieved political independen­ce in 1980 and are in the process of defining and attaining our total economic independen­ce."

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