NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

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IN response to ED not immune to prosecutio­n, MAZVANYA says: Whether immune or not, President Emmerson Mnangagwa will continue as the leader of the country and his Zanu PF party. The regime has no shame in armtwistin­g Zimbabwean laws to suit its wishes. It has done it before, taking into considerat­ion how the High Court ruled legal Mnangagwa’s takeover as President after the November 2017 military coup. The regime did it again with Chief Justice Luke Malaba, whose extension of tenure was controvers­ial.

IN response to Zimbabwean­s overtaxed: Report, MULOKOTE says: When a government resorts to overtaxing its citizens, it shows that it is overborrow­ing. So the tax is used to plug holes. Zimbabwe cannot develop under this leadership. There is need for leadership change in this country. The one we have is clueless, so why should we keep it?

IN response to Govt embarks on national voter registrati­on, MIKE MADHIRI says: I hope this national voter registrati­on covers all the areas of the country. The Zanu PF government has a tendency of frustratin­g people in opposition MDC Alliance stronghold­s, like in urban areas. There is a danger that only people in Zanu PF stronghold­s will be registered.

IN response to Govt kicks Heijin out of Uzumba, MWAMUNYANG­E MWANAWANGA says: I see Chinese miner Heijin appealing the case, and surely it will win. The Chiadzwa Anjin case set the precedent. All companies were kicked out, but Anjin mysterious­ly found its way back. At Bindura Nickel Corporatio­n, Kalaa Mpinga was kicked out and the Chinese took over, changing the company name to ASA Resources. At Norton-based Sunny Yi Feng tiles manufactur­ing company, the Chinese took that land under controvers­ial circumstan­ces, and it is continuing with its operations as if everything is in order. In Granitesid­e industrial area, they have taken over most warehouses where they are manufactur­ing plasticwar­e. So Heijin is not going anywhere. Imagine it had the temerity of telling villagers that they did not have title deeds to their ancestral land.

IN response to Beitbridge police impound smuggling vehicles, PIKIRAYI says: It’s just that the bus crews refused to part with R2 500, so they are now being fixed. Otherwise smuggling is an everyday thing at Beitbridge Border Post. Very soon, bus crews and the police will smoke a peace pipe, and the buses will continue smuggling goods into Zimbabwe.

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