The Standard (Zimbabwe)

● Chamisa speaks on sanctions, Khupe

- By Everson Mushava

MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa (pictured right) yesterday said the government was using sanctions to divert Zimbabwean­s' attention from its failure to deliver on promises to improve citizens’ lives.

The government last night organised a virtual gala to ostensibly put pressure on western countries to lift the sanctions imposed nearly two decades ago.

Last year a similar rally held at the 60 000-seater National Sports Stadium attracted a paltry crowd of 7 000 people despite the government dangling food to the revellers.

Chamisa told The Standard in an interview that last night’s event and the government’s campaign against sanctions through the public media was a distractio­n.

“Zimbabwean­s should take the day as an opportunit­y to imagine a better future without hunger, poverty, police brutality, abductions, and corruption,” he said.

“It’s a collective task for every Zimbabwean to imagine a Zimbabwe without the vices of bad governance from the current government.”

He added: “This should be a day of intercessi­on, pastors, bishops and priests should reflect on the real source of the problems Zimbabwean­s face.

“It should be a solidarity day to the suffering of Zimbabwean­s and victimised citizens.”

Zimbabwe has been facing its worst economic crisis in a decade characteri­sed by high prices of goods, liquidity challenges, increased poverty levels as well as unemployme­nt.

Mnangagwa and his ruling party have blamed the sanctions for the problems.

When he came to power, Mnangagwa said sanctions should never be used as a scapegoat for failure.

But two months as president, Mnangagwa changed course when the economy deteriorat­ed and started blaming the sanctions for the meltdown.

His party has also accused Chamisa and one of his deputies, Tendai Biti, of inviting the sanctions.

Mnangagwa’s government has lobbied the Southern African Developmen­t Community and the African Union to back its anti-sanctions call.

Chamisa, however, said the biggest challenges facing Zimbabwe today included “bad governance, corruption, illegitima­cy of the government emanating from a stolen mandate and not sanctions”.

He said Zanu PF was good at explaining causes of problems, and not solutions because it was aware that sanctions were not the major source of the country’s problems.

“Jingles, slogans, adverts, galas, protests will not solve the problem. It is high time Sadc should wake up and smell the coffee,” Chamisa said.

“Let Sadc see its own Zimbabwe without problems.

“Let Sadc do a reality check or it risks being irrelevant to the African problem.”

He added: “Sadc should remove the tinted glasses and have a proper reflection of Zimbabwe.

“Everything is not rosy and Sadc should not see celebrator­y fireworks where there is a dangerous fire. Sadc should not be part of the problem, but the solution.

“Cheering madness is dangerous because the madness will also affect you as a neighbour.

“You don’t cure a disease by lying to yourself.”

Chamisa dismissed charges that he and his party campaigned for the sanctions.

“Chamisa is not a god, he is not a state that rapes people, abducts people. Chamisa is not billions of dollars that disappear,” he charged.

“Chamisa is also not the one who manipulate­s the institutio­ns of the state.

“Don’t give me the powers that I don’t have. I don’t control Washington. I don’t have such powers.”

He said Mnangagwa’s government’s rule was based on lies and deceptions.

“That is why we have a senior government official holding a press conference to announce that Chamisa is training soldiers in (Moldova),” Chamisa added.

“We have officialis­ed lies in order to elevate foolish claims to the level of policy."

Meanwhile, Chamisa said he was not losing sleep over manoeuvres by the Thokozani Khupe-led MDC-T to decimate his MDC Alliance.

Mnangagwa last week formally recognised Khupe as the official leader of the opposition after the former deputy prime minister sneaked back into Parliament under controvers­ial circumstan­ces.

“I don’t have time for Khupe and Douglas Mwonzora (interim MDC-T secretaryg­eneral),” Chamisa said.

“I know they are simply playing a script handed to them by Zanu PF, enforced by captured institutio­ns.

“They are going nowhere. In fact, they are history. People always settle political disputes.”

Khupe is using a Supreme Court ruling that said she was the legitimate interim leader of the MDC-T after she was elbowed out in the battle to succeed the late Morgan Tsvangirai by Chamisa.

The MDC Alliance, however, insists that it broke ranks with Khupe before the 2018 elections and she has no right to take over legislator­s and councillor­s of a party that defeated her in the polls.

 ?? Picture: Aaron Ufumeli ?? Women and children fetch water from an unsafe source in Tshabalala township in Bulawayo yesterday. The city recently recorded cases of diarrhoea which a ected more than 200 people.
Picture: Aaron Ufumeli Women and children fetch water from an unsafe source in Tshabalala township in Bulawayo yesterday. The city recently recorded cases of diarrhoea which a ected more than 200 people.
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