The Herald (Zimbabwe)

MDC Alliance manifesto finally out

- Innocent Ruwende and Zvamaida Murwira

THE opposition MDC Alliance launched its election manifesto yesterday which political analysts said lacked originalit­y as it largely plagiarise­d Zanu-PF policies since 2013.

The manifesto is titled the “New Zimbabwe Pledge for a Sustainabl­e and Modernisat­ion Agenda for Real Transforma­tion” (SMART) and was launched at Jubilee Centre in Harare.

SMART is anchored on five pillars, namely smart governance, nation-building and the consensus state, smart sustainabl­e, shared and inclusive economy, smart citizen rights, interests and protection, smart social justice and delivery and smart reconstruc­tion and remodellin­g of the country’s infrastruc­ture.

The alliance has chosen Mr Nelson Chamisa as its presidenti­al candidate.

Analysts yesterday said most of the items in the manifesto were plagiarise­d from Zanu-PF’s Zimbabwe Agenda for Sustainabl­e Socio-Economic Transforma­tion (Zim-Asset) and its manifesto for the July 30 harmonised elections.

Political analyst Mr Richard Mahomva said the MDC Alliance blueprint was a mimic of Zanu-PF policies since 2013.

“The idea of SMART is problemati­c because it speaks of the agenda of transforma­tion, which is synonymous with Zanu-PF’s blueprint, the Zim-Asset. So it is a regurgitat­ion of what scaled Zanu-PF into power” (in 2013), he said.

“When you read the Zanu PF manifesto, it takes you into a gallery of renaissanc­e. In SMART there is a mimic of the Zanu-PF prospectus which came much earlier. The MDC Alliance’s late release was convenient and strategic.”

He said the voter and sharp analytical minds would have expected Mr Chamisa’s manifesto to be entrenched in generation­al renewal in line with the rhetoric of generation­al consensus.

Mr Mahomva said Mr Chamisa, like the Zanu-PF G40 cabal, tried to use the youth demographi­c to ascend to power.

Another political analyst, Mr Alexander Rusero, said

the MDC Alliance manifesto showed that the opposition had run out of ideas after the new dispensati­on led by President Mnangagwa filled the gaps that they historical­ly capitalise­d on.

“Their mantra had been that ‘Mugabe must go’, and he has gone. They were saying the country should join the internatio­nal community, and the new administra­tion has re-engaged and they have actually invited the European Union and other Western countries to observe the elections. They have been outmanoeuv­red. So what the MDC-T is doing is to resort to scale their issues by making unrealisti­c promises,” said Mr Rusero.

Mr Tawanda Mugwadi, another analyst, also said the MDC Alliance manifesto regurgitat­ed Zanu-PF’s Zim-Asset economic recovery blueprint.

“The manifesto is an attempt to regurgitat­e Zim-Asset with a slight variation in terminolog­y and figures, which shows lack of creativity in the MDC Alliance. Fundamenta­lly, how does the creation of a $100 billion economy become possible yet they doubt that a middle-income economy promised by Zanu-PF can be achieved by 2030?” he said.

Mr Mugwadi also said the MDC-T had no moral ground to speak against corruption when they had failed to rein in their councillor­s, who had failed to provide basic services in all urban local authoritie­s under their control.

“Moreso, the MDC factions launched their manifesto on the backdrop of intraparty violence marred by regrettabl­e levels of intoleranc­e at the hands of the so-called Vanguard. That means they should be the last to talk about political freedoms,” said Mr Mugwadi.

Political analyst Mr Goodwine Mureriwa said renaming of provinces was a peripheral issue at the moment.

“This is the same party which was spearheadi­ng devolution and supporting the creation of a Ndebele state. They are just furthering the interests of pressure groups such as the Bulawayo Agenda and Mthwakazi as well as a Western perspectiv­e to divide Zimbabwe for the purposes of creating ethnic conflicts,” he said.

“Dividing the country results in unnecessar­y ethnic conflicts which they want to use to justify Western interventi­on and regime change.”

He said if the MDC Alliance was genuine in stabilisin­g the currency they would instead of joining the Rand Union talk of re-introducin­g the Zimbabwe dollar because joining the Rand Union was no different from the current multi-currency system.

“The party is desperate. They are looking for loopholes in the Zanu-PF manifesto which they can’t find. They realised that the new dispensati­on had introduced the necessary reforms to get the country on its feet again,” he said.

Speaking at the manifesto launch, Mr Chamisa, who was confident of winning the elections, said he would rename the country to Great Zimbabwe if elected.

Through SMART, the MDC Alliance pledged to trim the size of Cabinet to no more than 15 ministers.

Other policies include renaming of provinces, designatin­g cities as Harare (commercial), Gweru (capital, administra­tive), Bulawayo (industrial) and Mutare (tourism).

The party said it would also introduce a flat corporate tax of 15 percent, do away with bond notes and join the Rand Union as well as have a $46 billion economy by 2023 and $100 billion by 2029.

Mr Chamisa said his government would look neither East or West but “follow the dollar”. He said they would immediatel­y recognise the state of Israel and invite it to open an embassy in Harare.

 ??  ?? Mr Chamisa
Mr Chamisa

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