NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

July 31 protests: Churches step in

- BY BLESSED MHLANGA/TATENDA CHITAGU

LEADERS of Christian denominati­ons under the Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC) have said they will today meet the country’s main political leaders to enable them to find common ground in a move meant to forestall

anti-goverment protests planned for July 31.

ZCC secretary-general Kenneth Mtata yesterday said the closeddoor meeting would take place at an undisclose­d venue this morning.

“The meeting between church leaders and politician­s is set for Monday (today) and will be closed to the public and the media. After the meeting, the outcome will be shared with the public,” he said yesterday.

Mtata said only a round-table discussion would save lives, the economy and allow Zimbabwe to move on without scars.

“If people are not listened to, they will find an outlet to express their anger and at times that road is not what we want. Leaders should sit down and do what’s good for the nation,” he said.

Evangelica­l Fellowship of Zimbabwe president Never Muparutsa said: “I am calling the nation to pray for the deteriorat­ing economy and general lack of stewardshi­p on God-given natural resources.”

The church is trying dissuade citizens from participat­ing in the protests after Defence deputy minister and Zanu PF secretary of the commissari­at Victor Matemadand­a threatened to unleash security forces on the protesters.

Zanu PF on Friday threatened to brutally quash the protests, reminding citizens of the bloody January 2019 fuel protests.

Mnangagwa’s government also hinted that lockdown measures were set to be tightened in what observers say was a ploy to scuttle the planned protests against the deteriorat­ing economic situation.

But protests organiser Jacob Ngarivhume, who is Transform Zimbabwe leader, and MDC Alliance youths yesterday vowed to stand up against police brutality.

“If we don’t speak out, we die. If we speak out, we die. The only option we have is to stand up and speak out against corruption, which has pulverised our nation.

This message is going to President Emmerson Mnangagwa to say to him ‘if you have failed to deal with corruption, you must go’ ... all indication­s are that he has failed,” Ngarivhume said.

Chamisa has backed the July 31 demonstrat­ions regardless of the chilling warnings from the State.

The MDC Alliance has also indicated its willingnes­s to engage Mnangagwa outside the Political Actors Dialogue (Polad), with the negotiatio­ns mediated by a foreign mediator and on neutral ground.

Mnangagwa, on the other hand, has insisted that he would only entertain dialogue held under Polad.

 ?? ZCC secretary-general Kenneth Mtata ??
ZCC secretary-general Kenneth Mtata
 ??  ?? MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa
MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa

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