NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

We’ve long neglected war vets: Govt

- BY NUNURAI JENA/BEAUTY NYUKE ● Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

GOVERNMENT has admitted that it has neglected its independen­ce war fighters for too long, and now wants to correct the anomaly by prioritisi­ng their welfare to ensure they are well taken care of.

Informatio­n, Media and Broadcasti­ng Services minister Monica Mutsvangwa, herself a veteran of the country’s liberation struggle, told NewsDay yesterday that the Liberation Struggle Bill would soon be finalised in Parliament to recognise the important role played by the war veterans.

“War veteran issues have been neglected for too long, but they are now on government’s top priority list as seen by the moving of the Bill that seeks to take care of their many problems” Mutsvangwa said.

Her statement follows remarks made last week by Zanu PF Mashonalan­d West provincial chairperso­n Cornelius Muoni who blasted the government for ignoring the plight of the country’s freedom fighters 41 years into independen­ce.

Muoni lamented the challenges faced by ex-combatants in accessing medication at government hospitals, adding that they were struggling to make ends meet from their measly monthly stipends.

“I don't know whether I should continue to lament the plight of war veterans to you minister (Mashonalan­d West Provincial Affairs minister Mary Mliswa-Chikoka) or not, but we have been saying this for a very long time. Some of us now are regretting why we went to war because of the bad treatment we are getting from government. We are not being treated according to the promises made and the pensions are too little and take time to come” Muoni said.

The Veterans of the Liberation Struggle Bill tabled in Parliament last year seeks to address the welfare of war veterans.

Meanwhile, the Zimbabwe Human Rights Associatio­n (ZimRights) yesterday took a dig on the Patriotic Bill which President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government is planning to introduce, saying true patriotism meant working together and restoring the dignity of every citizen.

“Forty-one years after independen­ce, if we surely had played our politics right and built national unity and harmony, we would not be legislatin­g patriotism as this would come naturally to citizens,” ZimRights said in a statement.

The rights group said the proposed Bill sought to stifle human rights work and internatio­nal advocacy as well as violate the right to free speech and associatio­n.

 ??  ?? Informatio­n minister Monica Mutsvangwa
Informatio­n minister Monica Mutsvangwa

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