The Herald (Zimbabwe)

I’ll pursue a perfection­ist policy: Dzapasi

- Elliot Ziwira Senior Writer

MS MELBAH DZAPASI, leader of #1980 Freedom Movement Zimbabwe (FMZ), has said her vision is to pursue a protection­ist policy that will give Zimbabwean­s control of agricultur­e, infrastruc­ture and mining sectors.

She said her party espoused the values of the First Chimurenga, the 20th Century resistance to colonial rule by mostly black Zimbabwean­s.

Ms Dzapasi (44), who is FMZ co-party leader alongside Dr Francis Danha, and is the presidenti­al contestant for the harmonised elections scheduled for July 30, told The Herald that if given a five-year mandate, the party’s priority was to wage a new economic war to liberate indigenous Zimbabwean­s from decades of economic exploitati­on.

“My introducti­on to politics was a calling into wider work, which led me to form Divine Alliance for Vitalisati­on of Inspired Developmen­t Party (DAVID Party) in 2016,” she said.

“Since then, I have been interactin­g with people on a one-on-one basis, letting them know of my vision for our nation; a vision premised on unity and faith.

“As FMZ, our vision is to empower indigenous people. As outlined in our manifesto, we promise the electorate a new Zimbabwe where the retail, gold and diamond mining, as well as agricultur­e sectors are protected through legislatio­n for the benefit of citizens.”

Ms Dzapasi expressed concern on compensati­on for land acquired through colonisati­on, which she said should have been corrected at independen­ce in 1980; because the liberation struggle was about the land.

“Through unity of purpose, as #1980 Freedom Movement Zimbabwe, we are embarking on a new battle to bring to fruition the seeds of the liberation struggle sown in the First and Second Chimurenga­s, culminatin­g in a protracted

war that brought back our land; the bedrock of our economy, stolen from us by colonialis­ts,” she said.

“However, in 1980 we got independen­ce and our fellow black man became leader of our beloved Zimbabwe, but our economy remained in the hands of colonialis­ts, which in this case is evidenced by the economic decadence we have experience­d from the time of the land reform programme, spearheade­d by the ruling party.”

If given the mandate to govern, Ms Dzapasi, a fashion designer and entreprene­ur, said she will make it mandatory that tobacco farmers get 100 percent foreign currency, breastfeed­ing mothers are entitled to monthly allowances and that deceased estate tax is abolished.

Through land audits that will reduce farm sizes and encourage full utilisatio­n, the FMZ leader pledged that all Zimbabwean­s will be entitled to land and improve their livelihood­s.

Although she expressed optimism that she would win the ticket to State House, Ms Dzapasi said as a party they still felt that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission was failing to fulfil its mandate.

“We believe that ZEC has already failed to fulfil its mandate to run a free, fair and credible election,” she said. “And as an action-oriented party, we shall use all our necessary radical resistance voice to show our distrust and disregard for the choreograp­hed spin-doctored poll.

“The underlying fundamenta­ls such as proper inspection of a finished (voters’) roll was not done, and members of the public were not accorded their constituti­onal right to inspect the voters’ roll,” she charged.

Voters were, however, given an entire month to inspect the roll with those not yet registered getting the opportunit­y to do so.

FMZ declared that the Nomination Court was flawed because many candidates were disqualifi­ed and their representa­tives were ejected from the peace pledge signing ceremony on June 26.

“It was a rushed proclamati­on leading to a flawed Nomination Court, leading to the disqualifi­cation of candidates across the political divide because nominees were alleged to be off the roll when the political parties were not even availed the same roll given to the courts,” she said.

“We were illegally evicted from the peace pledge event. We still await a written formal apology from the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission. A non-violent election is not necessaril­y a free and fair poll.”

 ??  ?? Ms Dzapasi
Ms Dzapasi

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