NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mat South MDC-T resolves to work with MDC Alliance

- BY NQOBANI NDLOVU ● Follow Nqobani on Twitter @NqobaniNdl­ovu

THE Matabelela­nd South branch of the MDC-T led by Douglas Mwonzora on Friday resolved to work with councillor­s affiliated to the MDC Alliance led by Nelson Chamisa in an electoral pact that will see them fielding one candidate to contest elections in the province.

More than 80 council by-elections are pending across the country, and more than 40 parliament­ary seats are vacant after the MDC-T recalled legislator­s and councillor­s affiliated to the MDC Alliance.

However, by-elections were suspended by government due to COVID-19 regulation­s.

In Matabelela­nd South, Mwonzora’s MDC-T provincial executive has said it is opposed to recalls and wants unity talks with other opposition parties to ensure victory against Zanu PF.

“We are planning on having one single candidate from the MDC Alliance or MDC-T so that we push the Matabelela­nd South agenda. The electorate is clear that it wants a united MDC,” Matabelela­nd South provincial chairperso­n Ekem Moyo (MDC-T), who is former Gwanda South legislator, said.

On Friday, the provincial executive led by Moyo, provincial secretary-general Younger Moyo and organising secretary Bekezela Maplanka met a number of MDC Alliance councillor­s in Gwanda to strike a unity pact.

“We have to think of the electorate. At the end of the day, it is our feeling that constituen­ts should not be sacrificed because of our difference­s as the leadership. We have to work for the good of the electorate which voted us into power. In our engagement­s with ordinary party supporters and the general citizenry, they are clear that they are not happy with all this infighting,” Moyo said.

“In Matabelela­nd South, we have a number of councillor­s from the MDC Alliance that we are working with because they were elected and should not be sacrificed or fired.”

In terms of section 129(1)(k) of the Constituti­on, legislator­s and councillor­s can be recalled at the instigatio­n of the party that got them elected into Parliament.

Electoral watchdogs like the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (Zesn) have, however, expressed concern over the slow pace in implementi­ng electoral reforms ahead of the by-elections and general elections in 2023.

“Zesn calls upon the government to move with speed in the implementa­tion of the electoral reforms, as most remain unattended to at a time when Zimbabwe is barely two years away from yet another set of harmonised elections in 2023,” Zesn said in a recent statement.

“If addressed early, the reforms would contribute to a more credible electoral process. Having to rush electoral law changes on the eve of elections, as has been the case in the past, is not in the best interest of democracy.”

 ?? ?? One person was seriously injured and taken to Zhombe Mission Hospital after a car he was travelling in fell into a river bed at a bridge along the Kwekwe-Gokwe Road on Saturday
One person was seriously injured and taken to Zhombe Mission Hospital after a car he was travelling in fell into a river bed at a bridge along the Kwekwe-Gokwe Road on Saturday

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