NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Stay in your lane, rights defenders tell chiefs

- BY LORRAINE MUROMO ● Follow Lorraine on Twitter @RMuromo

HUMAN rights defenders yesterday urged traditiona­l leaders to desist from pressurisi­ng their subjects to vote for a particular political party as the country gears for the 2023 elections.

In the past elections, villagers have been coerced to vote for the ruling Zanu PF party, and threatened with violence or eviction if they did not do so.

Zanu PF recently also ordered teachers in rural communitie­s to vote for party candidates in the 2023 elections.

Heal Zimbabwe Trust spokespers­on Rawlings Magede said it was against the country’s Constituti­on for traditiona­l leaders to pick a political side.

“Traditiona­l leaders are obligated by the law to be apolitical,” Magede said.

“Section 281 of the Constituti­on highlights that traditiona­l leaders must not further the interests of any political party or cause. They must not act in a partisan manner. If they do so, they will be violating the fundamenta­l rights and freedoms of persons.”

“It is very feasible for traditiona­l leaders to be apolitical, but what is lacking is the political will to respect the Constituti­on. Traditiona­l leaders are just victims of the patronage system which over the years has been used to constantly whip them into line and keep them subservien­t to the dictates of politician­s,” he said.

In a recent report on human rights issues in the country, the Zimbabwe Peace Project (ZPP) alleged that Zanu PF had captured the country’s electoral systems by using traditiona­l leaders to enhance its political agenda.

“On June 6, 2021, Zanu PF representa­tives were moving around ward 4, section 12 and section 13 of Mbizo in Kwekwe listing down people’s names to create Zanu PF cell groups. The group comprising two women and a man informed residents that the lists were also going to be used for future food distributi­on programmes,” the report read.

“This goes against food distributi­on principles that provide that every deserving beneficiar­y must get aid regardless of political affiliatio­n. In Chimaniman­i, Zanu PF hijacked council works programmes by taking over the recruitmen­t processes of the general and casual workers for a road rehabilita­tion programme that began early June in Chimaniman­i, and they only took in those who are in the Zanu PF branch structures.”

“All of this is clearly part of the scheme to use all available resources and platforms to coerce people to join Zanu PF ahead of 2023,” the ZPP report read.

However, Zanu PF national spokespers­on Simon Khaya Moyo has denied the reports.

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