NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

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IN response to 15 top cops up for bashing Zanu PF supporters, PIKIRAYI says: When we say Zanu PF pulls the strings in everything in Zimbabwe, the ruling party will want to deny it publicly. Now had it been MDC Alliance supporters who were bashed and had lodged a complaint with the police, the perpetrato­rs would have been promoted. Let’s see how it pans out now that 15 police officers have been arrested for bashing Zanu PF supporters.

IN response to MDC Alliance claims more attacks, GWIZHIKITI says: President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his Zanu PF party are setting the stage for a violent 2023 election campaign. Judging by what Mnangagwa said about soldiers beating up Kuwadzana people, I predict another blood bath in the run-up to the 2023 polls. I hope the internatio­nal world is watching.

MBUDAYA says: I urge youths to register to vote. We should be masters of our future. Let us not allow the analogue generation to dictate how the digital generation operates. Zimbabwe needs a fresh leader, someone with new ideas who can take us to Canaan.

IN response to D-Day for unvaccinat­ed civil servants, MWANANGUND­U says: Desperate times call for desperate measures. We are in a pandemic and we all want to resume normal operations. I would like to urge all unvaccinat­ed people to take the jab. We have to reach herd immunity by all means possible. Most of the adult population should get vaccinated. Getting vaccinated does not mean you will no longer contract the deadly virus, but minimises one’s chances of getting hospitalis­ed or going through severe illness. So let’s all get vaccinated.

IN response to Mnangagwa ignorant of economic issues: US economist, NDABANENGI says: Zimbabwe is a pity. It has a clueless leadership. It’s quite sad that for all its potential, it ranks very lowly. The late former President Robert Mugabe inherited a jewel when Zimbabwe achieved majority rule in 1980, but he failed to take care of the jewel and oversaw a brutal leadership, which not only decimated the rights record in the country, but also the economy. Now Mugabe’s successor, Emmerson Mnangagwa, has not been any better. He had a chance to cleanse himself of the soiled past, but failed to capitalise on that.

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