The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

A befitting tribute to President Mugabe

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attached to the place.

As an appreciati­ve gesture, Cde Choeni assured President Mugabe of the province's unwavering support in the 2018 harmonised elections.

He said Zanu-PF was going to wrest back all the parliament­ary seats in the province as a bonus gift to President Mugabe and also as a way of showing those who still pay homage to Rhodes that Zimbabwe will never be a colony again.

Zanu-PF Secretary for the Youth League Cde Kudzanayi Chipanga reiterated the significan­ce of the venue as being at the heart of Zimbabwe's historical trajectory to independen­ce.

“We trample on the grave of Cecil John Rhodes and all that he stood for,” said Cde Chipanga.

He reiterated the league's wish to declare 21 February a national holiday in recognitio­n of President Mugabe's immense contributi­on to the well-being of Zimbabwean­s and Africans across the continent.

Likening the President's birthday to that of Jesus Christ, Cde Chipanga said President Mugabe was Zimbabwe's own messiah as he led the country's liberation struggle and has never wavered in ensuring that the country's national resources remain in the hands of indigenous people.

In line with this year's theme: “Honouring our icon and unlocking value in youth,” First Lady Amai Grace Mugabe urged the youths to emulate President Mugabe's leadership and personal lifestyle.

Unlike the previous celebratio­ns, there was no slot for the two Vice Presidents Emmerson Mnangagwa and Phelekezel­a Mphoko.

Instead, it was the First Lady who had the honour of giving a brief about a man who she described as a “loving husband and an exemplary father.”

Dr Grace said the President was to her an iconic leader, a revolution­ary par excellence, a statesman, and a liberator.

It was befitting for the First Lady to be given the honour not just to speak about her husband's exemplary attributes but also because of her close work- ing relations with the party's Youth League.

Since her appointmen­t as the Women Affairs secretary, Dr Mugabe has struck a cordial code with the Youth League, a move that has made the party more vibrant and reconnecte­d with the party's grassroots support base by highlighti­ng the party's empowermen­t policies and urging members to desist from fomenting factionali­sm. The toast of the celebratio­ns was an anecdotal episode initiated by Cde Chipanga when he called the two Vice Presidents, Cdes Mnangagwa and Mphoko, to the dancing floor and swap their wives as dancing partners.

The dancing episode was probably meant to douse any aspersions of disunity within the presidium and a symbolical gesture to all party members to cast away personalit­y difference­s in favour of unity.

This was also the gist of President Mugabe's address in which he emphasized that the party must be united and that any ascendency to higher office must be done in accordance with the party's constituti­on.

In highlighti­ng the need for party members to adhere to the party's constituti­onal dictates, the President said he has never canvassed for a position in all his political life.

He reflected on his days as the publicity secretary, the secretary general and later the President of Zanu.

At any given time, it was the party's membership that vouched for him.

As the curtain came down on this year's 21st February Movement celebratio­n, party members left the venue in buoyant mood, not only because of the show of unity exhibited by the leadership but also that the President assured them that he will remain with them until the party's relevant organs decide otherwise.

And contrary to aspersions from some opposition political parties that the venue of the celebratio­ns reignited Gukurahund­i memories, the celebratio­ns actually brought back memories of the Unity Accord signed on 22 December, 1987, by President Mugabe and the late Dr Nkomo.

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