The Herald (Zimbabwe)

MDC-T jittery over ailing Tsvangirai

- Herald Reporter

PANIC has gripped the MDC-T amid revelation­s that party leader Morgan Tsvangirai’s close associates have followed him to South Africa to monitor his condition after he was flown there as an emergency case early morning last Friday.

Mr Tsvangirai was reportedly carried into a private plane on a stretcher at Harare Internatio­nal Airport around 2am, although his office sought to downplay the incident, insisting the MDC-T leader had flown to South Africa for a routine medical check-up.

While Mr Tsvangirai’s spokesman, Mr Luke Tamborinyo­ka, yesterday insisted that the opposition leader was well, party officials stressed he was in bad shape and that his close associates, the Makone family, had joined him in South Africa.

The officials said it would be advisable to tell the truth about Mr Tsvangirai’s condition to avoid unhelpful speculatio­n which could only hurt the party and cause panic among followers.

Mr Tsvangirai was airlifted to South Africa after his condition drasticall­y deteriorat­ed during a workshop in Kadoma.

He was recently diagnosed with cancer of the colon and has been receiving chemothera­py in South Africa for some time.

“We wish the president very well but he is still in the woods,” said a senior MDC-T official.

He added: “Yes, he is responding to medication but his condition is not changing and that is our major worry. What is worrying us is that he keeps issuing statements through Tamborinyo­ka saying he is stable and urging people to vote yet it is clear he is not well. This attitude is not helpful.

“He has been going for routine check-ups for some time now but the fact that he was hurriedly airlifted at a workshop in the company of a doctor is clear evidence that he is seriously ill. You cannot fool peo-

ple like that.”

The official said MDC-T members were also irked by the manner Mr Tsvangirai’s illness was being handled by party officials.

“What has irked other senior party members is the way the president’s sickness is being handled by members of the ‘kitchen cabinet’ such as the Makones.

“They are ring fencing the president and want to appear as if they are the ones who love him more than any other party members.”

Another source said Mr Tsvangirai’s illness had plunged the whole party into confusion about the future if he were incapacita­ted beyond recovery.

“Remember, we have three vice presidents and our constituti­on is silent on the issue of succession,” said the source, who sits in the MDC-T’s standing committee.

“Dr Thokozani Khupe is the deputy responsibl­e for administra­tion, Engineer Elias Mudzuri is responsibl­e for organising and Advocate Nelson Chamisa is responsibl­e for internatio­nal relations,” said the source.

“None of them can claim to be superior to the other although those sympatheti­c to Chamisa are already touting him as the possible successor,” he said.

“The truth of the matter is that the constituti­on is silent about that matter and the appointmen­t of Eng Mudzuri and Adv Chamisa was never meant to deal with the succession issue but factionali­sm that was threatenin­g to tear the movement apart.”

He said it was important for Mr Tsvangirai to appoint someone senior to act in his capacity whenever he travels outside the country for whatever reason.

This, he said, would help in coordinati­ng communicat­ion and give it more authority.

Throughout the weekend and yesterday, Mr Tamborinyo­ka insisted Mr Tsvangirai was well and that he was urging people to register in readiness to vote in next’s elections.

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