Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Chamisa, Grace pact angers partners

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MDC-Alliance leader Mr Nelson Chamisa’s alleged dalliances with the former First Family is understood to be making partners in the coalition uneasy and there are now real fears that he is planning to ditch them if he wins the 30 July elections.

While tensions have been simmering over the double nomination of Alliance candidates in some constituen­cies, which at first was perceived to be accidental, there is now growing suspicion that the failure by Mr Chamisa to force his party’s candidates, particular­ly in constituen­cies reserved for Alliance partners, to withdraw seven days after the sitting of the Nomination Court on 14 June, including reluctance to actively campaign for them, was well choreograp­hed to prop-up his MDC-T political formation.

Mr Chamisa — who was described by People’s Rainbow Coalition (PRC) leader Mrs Joice Mujuru as dishonest in an interview with Capitalk FM on 2 July this year — is now being accused of pivoting his party on the National Patriotic Front (NPF), a pet political project of the former First Family, in order to insulate himself from coalition partners.

The tensions are understood to be now playing out in constituen­cies such as Harare South, where NPF candidates, which are disguised under the MDC-Alliance banner, are pitted against fellow MDC-Alliance candidates. In Harare South, former G40 foot soldier and member of the NPF Mr Shadreck Mashayamom­be is among the 14 candidates contesting to represent the constituen­cy.

He is representi­ng MDC-Alliance together with Mr Samuel Saurombe of Transform Zimbabwe, which was guaranteed the constituen­cy through the coalition agreement. In an interview with our Harare Bureau last week, MDC-Alliance spokespers­on Professor Welshman Ncube, whose MDC party was also “cheated” of its reserved seats in Matabelela­nd South, professed ignorance of Mr Mashayamom­be’s candidatur­e.

“The official position of the MDC-Alliance on Harare South is that the seat was reserved for a Transform Zimbabwe candidate. Any other candidate on the list who is not from Transform Zimbabwe does not have the blessing of the Alliance. The Alliance will not recognise someone who was not seconded from Transform Zimbabwe as per the initial agreement,” he said.

But Mr Mashayamom­be is sticking to his guns. “The list released by Mr Morgan Komichi is the one indicating that I am the official Alliance candidate and I am sticking to that list. I cannot comment further on the issues you have raised. Can you kindly ask Mr Komichi for more details. I am on the ground campaignin­g and looking up to Heaven for my doors to be opened and, God willing, I will reclaim the seat,” he said.

It is the same pattern in all the constituen­cies that have fielded two Alliance candidates. In Harare province, which is considered the opposition party’s stronghold, the MDC-Alliance has fielded two candidates in Mabvuku-Tafara and Harare South. Most notably, in Mabvuku-Tafara, where more than 13 candidates are vying for the constituen­cy, Mr James Maridadi will face-off with his namesake and fellow party member Mr James Chidhakwa.

The Alliance also fielded two candidates in four constituen­cies in Mashonalan­d Central province.In Masvingo province, MDC-Alliance principal Mr Jacob Ngarivhume (Transform Zimbabwe) faces the ignominy of fighting it out with fellow Alliance member, a Mr Boniface Mudzingwa, in Bikita East.

In Gutu North, Alliance candidates Messrs Juniel Manyere and Edmore Maramwidze will have a duel with each other before fighting off challenges from candidates from other political parties.

But fellow MDC-Alliance members believe this is part of a broader political gamble by Mr Chamisa to get rid of Alliance partners, whose support he believes is insignific­ant, to “get rid of them” through the ballot.

“We suspect that (Mr Chamisa) increasing­ly fancies the NPF, which, in his estimation, might bring him the support he is desperatel­y craving for. He is pretending to tag along with other political parties for symbolic value. He remains elusive on his pact with (Mrs) Grace Mugabe and, what the horse trading between the two parties involves, but as (Sarah) Mahoka (of the NPF women’s league) has already said, it appears true that they have been promised the Vice-President’s post,” said an Alliance member who is privy to the goings on in the political formation.

Mr Chamisa, the source further adds, is playing a smoke-and-mirrors game with Alliance partners and also playing fast-and-loose with MDCAllianc­e supporters. It is believed that he fears that broaching the subject will be calamitous to his political fortunes, but he is set on making a supposedly secret pact with Mrs Grace Mugabe, which has seemingly riled fellow principals in the Alliance.

Incidental­ly, former G40 kingpin Professor Jonathan Moyo, who is part of the NPF team, and his allies Mssrs Mduduzi Mathuthu and Edmund Kudzai have since thrown their lot with Mr Chamisa through a calculated social media campaign. It is believed that the former G40 team’s links and liaisons with Mr Chamisa pre-dates the explusion of then Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa from both Government and Zanu-PF in November last year, and the forces are now coalescing ahead of the 30 July elections.

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