The Herald (Zimbabwe)

President to hit ground running

- Felex Share Senior Reporter

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was sworn in yesterday as Zimbabwe’s second Executive President since independen­ce in 1980, has said his Government will, with immediate effect, implement sweeping measures across sectors to stimulate economic growth and create employment.

Among the many measures, President Mnangagwa promised a sturdy re-engagement with the internatio­nal community saying “isolation has never been splendid or viable”.

Locally, he pledged to tackle the cash liquidity challenges head-on, act on corruption, relax export procedures, ensure maximum utilisatio­n of land and protect foreign investment­s, among other policies.

In his acceptance speech after taking the Oath of Office before thousands of people at the giant National Sports Stadium in Harare, President Mnangagwa said Zimbabwe was “renewing itself” and should never remain hostage to its past.

He appealed to Zimbabwean­s to let “bygones be bygones” and embrace each other in defining the new destiny.

“Our economic policy will be predicated on our agricultur­e, which is the mainstay and on creating conditions for an investment-led economic recovery that puts premium on job creation,” President Mnangagwa said.

“Key choices will have to be made to attract foreign direct investment to tackle high levels of unemployme­nt, while transformi­ng our economy towards the tertiary. The many skilled Zimbabwean­s who have left the country for various reasons must now come into the broad economic calculus designed for our recovery and take-off.

“The fabulous natural resources that we have as a country must now be exploited for national good, through mutually gainful partnershi­ps with internatio­nal investors whose presence in our midst must be valued and secured. “The bottom line is an economy which

is back on its feet and in which a variety of players make choices without doubts and in an environmen­t shorn of fickle policy shifts and unpredicta­bility. Only that way can we recover this economy, create jobs for our youths and reduce poverty for all our people who must witness real, positive changes in their lives.”

To tackle liquidity challenges, President Mnangagwa said, real solutions were urgently needed.

“People must be able to access their earnings and savings as and when they need them,” President Mnangagwa said.

“We must shed misbehavio­urs and acts of indiscipli­ne which have characteri­sed the past.

“Acts of corruption must stop forthwith. Where these occur, swift justice must be served to show each other and all, that crime and other acts of economic sabotage can only guarantee ruin to perpetrato­rs. Grief awaits those who depart from the path of virtue and clean business.”

To civil servants, President Mnangagwa said: “It cannot be business as usual. You now have to roll up your sleeves in readiness to deliver.

“We have an economy to recover, a people to serve. Each and every one of us must now earn their hour, day, week and month at work.

“Gone are the days of absenteeis­m and desultory applicatio­n, days of unduly delaying and forestalli­ng decisions and services in the hope of extorting dirty rewards.

“The culture in Government just has to change, unseating those little ‘gods’ idly sitting in public offices, for a busy, empathetic civil service that Zimbabwe surely deserves.”

President Mnangagwa said the establishm­ent of Special Economic Zones would be accelerate­d to attract investment and increase exports.

He said the culture by bankers of levying depositors should end as “it contradict­s the reasons at the heart of banking as a business”.

President Mnangagwa said Zimbabwe harboured no ill and belligeren­t intentions against any nation and was prepared to work with all countries, including those that have been hostile to it.

“I stand here today to say that our country is ready for a sturdy re-engagement programme with all nations of the world,” President Mnangagwa said.

“As we bear no malice towards any nations, we ask those who have punished us in the past to reconsider their economic and political sanctions against us. Whatever misunderst­andings may have subsisted in the past, let these make way to a new beginning which sees us relating to one another in multi-layered, mutually beneficial ways as equal and reciprocal­ly dependent partners.

“In this global world, no nation is, can, or needs to be an island, one unto itself. Solidarity and partnershi­ps are and will always be the way.”

President Mnangagwa added: “We are ready to embrace each and all, on principles of mutual respect and common humanity. We will take definite steps to re-engage those nations who have had issues with us in the past.

“Equally, will take measures to ensure that we acknowledg­e and begin to show commitment towards settling our debts and enter into new partnershi­ps.”

President Mnangagwa said the land reform programme could not be reversed, as it would be a great betrayal to those who fought in the liberation struggle.

He exhorted beneficiar­ies of the programme to optimally utilise the land, adding that the Land Commission would be capacitate­d to deal with all outstandin­g issues related to land reform.

“My Government is committed to compensati­ng those farmers from whom land was taken, in terms of the laws for the land,” he said.

“Complex issues of land tenure will have to be addressed urgently to ensure finality to the ownership and management of this key resource, which is central to national stability and sustained economic recovery.”

On domestic politics, President Mnangagwa said the 2018 harmonised elections would proceed as scheduled and peacefully.

 ??  ?? President Emmerson Mnangagwa puts pen to paper before Chief Justice Luke Malaba soon after being sworn-in as Head of State and Government and Commander-in-Chief of the ZDF at the National Sports Stadium in Harare yesterday.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa puts pen to paper before Chief Justice Luke Malaba soon after being sworn-in as Head of State and Government and Commander-in-Chief of the ZDF at the National Sports Stadium in Harare yesterday.

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