The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

‘Zanu PF has no hand in CCC implosion’

- Lincoln Towindo News Editor

THE recent implosion of the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC), which culminated in the resignatio­n of the party’s leader Mr Nelson Chamisa last week, was a result of internecin­e power struggles by rival factions within the organisati­on and should not be blamed on ZANU PF, a senior Government official has said.

In an interview with The Sunday Mail yesterday, Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said Mr Chamisa’s statement announcing his resignatio­n was riddled with falsehoods meant to apportion blame on outside influences, when, in fact, the party’s collapse was occasioned by internal strife.

“He wants to allege that he is leaving his party because of ZANU PF which is not allowing him to run his party,” said Minister Ziyambi.

“That assertion is akin to a man who abandons his family because the family next door is allegedly making it impossible for him to run his own house.

“It shows that we are dealing with a person who is incapable of leading in times of adversity.

“If you are a leader, you cannot abandon your flock; you make sure you rally behind them and you lead from the front, and not the back.

“But we are dealing with somebody who blames everyone except himself; in fact, he believes that he is the only one who is OK. Everyone else is at fault except him.”

Mr Chamisa’s statement, he said, “blames all his problems on ZANU PF”.

“We are just beneficiar­ies of their foolishnes­s and not the source of their problems.”

The chaos in the opposition, said Minister Ziyambi, was costing the country dearly through financing by-elections.

“What we have done is, where they have been unable to agree with each other and where they have expelled each other, we have followed due process and allowed by-elections to happen.

“In fact, in my earlier statements, I have said that their foolishnes­s has cost the country a lot of funds in terms of financing the by-elections.”

ZANU PF’s parliament­ary majority following last year’s harmonised elections, he added, was sufficient for the party to govern, proving it has no incentive to cause the by-elections.

“We were pretty much happy with the results and we were going to work along the lines of the results that we had, contrary to their view that we are

◆ obsessed with a two-thirds majority.

“Our leader indicated that we must respect the will of the people and work with what we have; that is the message that came from His Excellency,” he said.

“He said let’s work with what we got and that is what we were geared to do.

“But fortunatel­y for us, and unfortunat­ely for the economy, they decided to fight among themselves, and who are we to say we don’t want to go for a by-election when the law stipulates that is the procedure to follow?

“We are not in any way interested in a twothirds majority; we have a sufficient majority in Parliament to ensure that what is required to govern the country happens.”

Mr Chamisa’s attempts to sully the country’s electoral processes were an attempt to clutch at straws following his party’s comprehens­ive defeat in August last year, he added.

“In his childish cries, he says ZANU PF manipulate­d the delimitati­on exercise.

“But you will recall that ZANU PF MPs were at the forefront of pinpointin­g certain deficienci­es in the delimitati­on report. But the way our laws are couched is such that Parliament and the President or political parties do not approve the delimitati­on process.”

These institutio­ns, he said, were only given the leeway to comment on the report in terms of the law.“And the comments that were given, even by the President and ZANU PF, were critical of the report. And at that particular time, the CCC never gave a comment attacking the delimitati­on report. But now that he has decided to abandon his family, he now says the delimitati­on exercise was manipulate­d in favour of ZANU PF, which we deny.”

Minister Ziyambi said Mr Chamisa’s claims that his party was frustrated during election campaigns were unfounded.

“He now complains that ZANU PF wanted to bar his candidates from contesting in Bulawayo. But ZANU PF merely followed the processes and argued in court that their people submitted nomination papers out of time and the court ruled that they will allow them to contest.”

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