NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

‘Let’s unite to end Zim crises’

- BY MOSES MATENGA

SEVERAL organisati­ons from labour, lawyers, academics and churches under the National Convergenc­e Platform banner have resolved to unite citizens in a non-partisan manner to end the country’s worsening economic and political crises.

In a communiqué released after the National Convergenc­e Platform Summit held on Africa Day, the organisati­ons said there was need for unity of purpose for Zimbabwean­s to speak with one voice in the wake of a multifacet­ed crises characteri­sed by cash shortages, high unemployme­nt rate and hyperinfla­tion.

“There was consensus that the nation is gripped by an interconne­cted set of challenges that have now been exposed and compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic, namely the broken relationsh­ips, economic meltdown, failure to entrench constituti­onalism, internatio­nal isolation and the humanitari­an crises characteri­sed by severe food insecurity, human insecurity, and broken health system,” the communiqué read in part.

“The participan­ts agreed on the value of a citizen-driven process, hence the need to further refine the details of the proposed comprehens­ive national settlement framework on the basis of a broad national consultati­on.”

Among the organisati­ons were the Election Resource Centre, Habakkuk Trust, Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, Dumiso Dabengwa Foundation, the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum, residents associatio­ns and Women in Law Society Africa, among others.

The Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Developmen­t, Zimbabwe Christian Alliance and the Zimbabwe Election Support Network also formed part of the organisati­ons working towards a “broad national consensus on what should constitute the agenda towards a comprehens­ive national settlement”.

“The objectives are also committing to a multiple-track national dialogue process leading to a comprehens­ive national settlement and agreeing on the form, structure and design of such an inclusive national dialogue,” the communiqué further read.

“The NCP is constitute­d on the belief that Zimbabwean problems will only be resolved when Zimbabwean­s commit themselves to a united front to resolve them.

“Thematic technical committees reported on their pre-summit meetings and made submission­s addressing the overview of their respective committees in terms of importance in addressing the national question, content, guiding principles and the envisaged process leading to a clear articulati­on of the five areas of the national question.”

The summit agreed that there was need for a broad-based and evidence-based national humanitari­an and emergency response to address food insecurity, education, healthcare and social service delivery crises and a new social contract on the basis of an inclusive national economic vision and a broadly agreed reform process towards constituti­onalism.”

The summit also agreed to have a “mutually acceptable closure of the long past and recent human rights abuses, restore and normalise regional, continenta­l, and global relations”.

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