NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

We’re still in bondage: Opposition, CSOs

- BY MOSES MATENGA/BEAUTY NYUKE • Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

ZIMBABWEAN­S have been described as a people who still live under bondage despite the sacrifices made by heroes of the Chimurenga was during the struggle for independen­ce.

This was said yesterday by analysts and opposition political parties who told NewsDay that the situation in the country did not exhibit characteri­stics of an independen­t country.

Speaking ahead of today’s Heroes’ Day commemorat­ions, MDC Alliance secretary-general Charlton Hwende said the obtaining resembled what pushed the liberation fighters to take up arms against the colonial regime.

“The current generation of young people should learn lessons from the bravery, sacrifice and ideologica­l clarity of the gallant youth of the 1970s.

“Forty years after independen­ce, we are still to achieve the important oneman-one-vote objective of the liberation war. Elections under successive Zanu

PF government­s continue to be rigged, while many citizens are denied the right to vote in independen­t Zimbabwe.

“In the post-colonial State, the majority of black Zimbabwean­s are still excluded economical­ly. Land and mineral resources are still owned by a minority population of blacks directly linked to the ruling party and its political elite,” Hwende said.

“The post-colonial regime has adopted and perfected the oppressive laws used by the pre-independen­ce government. This has resulted in targeted arrests and abduction of opposition party members and perceived anti-government activists, as well as the closure of democratic space.”

Hwende said the country’s youthful population had the duty to complete the liberation struggle and free themselves from oppression.

“While the liberation struggle was about taking up arms, the current national democratic struggle is about occupying the streets and demanding free and fair elections in the spirit of citizens’ convergenc­e for change,” Hwende said.

Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, a grouping of civic society organisati­ons said the sacrifices made by liberation war heroes were being undermined by continued militarisa­tion of key State institutio­ns and closure of democratic space.

“The current situation in Zimbabwe, which has been characteri­sed by militarisa­tion of key State institutio­ns, closure of the democratic space, persecutio­n of dissenting voices, weaponisat­ion of the Judiciary, gross corruption and plunder of national resources while the majority wallow in abject poverty and a constituti­onal crisis, among other vices, serves to betray the aspiration­s of the heroes who went to war to fight colonialis­m,” the coalition spokespers­on Marvellous Khumalo said.

Khumalo said criminalis­ation of civil society work, enactment of draconian legislatio­n and the push towards a one-party State was betraying the aspiration­s of liberation fighters.

In a statement, Zanu PF said it was because of the sacrifices of the liberation fighters that Zimbabwean were enjoying freedoms in the country.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa was saluted for honouring the First and Second Chimurenga heroes, especially the recent erection of the Mbuya Nehanda statue in Harare.

War veterans chairman Chris Mutsvangwa said though things had taken a downturn under the late former President Robert Mugabe, the country was now moving forward under Mnangagwa.

“The President has since taken a firm grip of the national finance system as of June 2020. There was the domesticat­ion of the national currency by banning or husbanding those who moonlighte­d as private central bankers, and in the dark process driving business and debilitati­ng inflation,” he said.

Mutsvangwa said under Mnangagwa, there had been economic boom, especially in tobacco farming and the mining industries.

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