The Herald (Zimbabwe)

ZANU-PF unstoppabl­e: Mliswa

- Lloyd Gumbo Herald Reporter

INDEPENDEN­T Member of Parliament for Norton, Mr Temba Mliswa says the proposed coalition of opposition parties will not bear fruit as the parties lack the strength to fish from the ZANU-PF pool.

He said the recent by-election in Bikita West where ZANU-PF candidate Cde Beauty Chabaya got more than 13 000 votes was testimony that the revolution­ary party continued to consolidat­e its support base.

Mr Mliswa made the remarks while addressing the media in Harare on Wednesday as he reiterated that the MDC-T had no input in his victory in the Norton by-election last year.

He said the outcome of the Bikita West by-election was a clear indication that ZANU-PF meant business.

“The opposition has no strategy and answer to the problems of this country,” said Mr Mliswa.

“I said it and I will repeat it, you cannot win an election in this country without a component of ZANU-PF. Do your maths. ZANU-PF had over 60 percent in 2013 while opposition had below 40 percent. Even if the opposition gets together, it will still remain 40 percent. I have not seen anything meaningful that they have done.

“They just want to ride on what Z ZANU-PF is not doing, which it must do. If ZANU-PF decided to focus on addressing the policies in their manifesto and not the factions, which are there, they are untouchabl­e.”

Mr Mliswa said the Bikita-West by-election outcome had dealt ZimPF leader, Dr Joice Mujuru, a major blow.

He said while Mr Kudakwashe Gopo was the candidate, the greatest loser was his party leader, Dr Joice Mujuru whose party made a maiden appearance at last week’s by-election.

Mr Mliswa also rapped Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t Minister and ZANU-PF Politburo member, Professor Jonathan Moyo accusing him of fraud.

“In 1998 in Kenya, Professor Moyo’s former employers, the Ford Foundation accused him of stealing over $108 000 from a fund advanced to the Series on Alternativ­e Research in East Africa Trust (Sareat) that was meant for studies on policy issues,” said Mr Mliswa.

“This money was allegedly siphoned through an organisati­on named after his children into his account in South Africa where the professor is purported to have purchased a house.

“He then moved to the University of Witwatersr­and in 1998 where they claim that he eventually absconded with R100 million research grant for the project.

“So how unfounded are the Zimdef allegation­s given the professor’s alleged penchant for dipping into funds meant for meaningful projects? said Mr Mliswa.

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