NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zipra cries foul over vetting process

- BY SILAS NKALA Follow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

ZIPRA war veterans have criticised last month’s non-combatant vetting process, saying it fell short of their expectatio­ns due to poor publicity of the exercise by the government.

The non-combatants include expolitica­l prisoners, detainees, restrictee­s and war collaborat­ors.

They were vetted last month in a very chaotic process which resulted in a female ex-combatant Nomathani Moyo (66) dying in a queue in Elangeni Training Centre in Bulawayo awaiting her turn to be vetted.

Zipra ex-combatants in Bulawayo on Wednesday conducted a postmortem meeting for the vetting programme.

They said they identified many shortcomin­gs and recommende­d that the process be extended.

Petros Sibanda, the Zipra Veterans Associatio­n secretary-general told South ern Eye that the intended beneficiar­ies encountere­d numerous challenges emanating from poor communicat­ion.

“The challenges differed province by province, but the major one was that there was poor communicat­ion about the process by the Defence and War Veterans ministry to the unvetted comrades. As a result, we feel that the vetting exercise should be extended.

“In the rural areas, it was not clear how the mobile vetting teams operated and we suspect that undeservin­g comrades ended up being vetted,” Sibanda said.

He said the vetting process should be decentrali­sed to minimise transport costs and accommodat­e the sick and aged.

“There are some comrades living in the diaspora who have not been vetted. On the issue of political detainees, we also feel that those who were detained for a period of six months should be accommodat­ed.”

Sibanda said the war collaborat­ors, who supported urban guerrillas, should also be considered.

“The vetting process must be non-partisan. There is need for the government to come up with a clear policy on how dependants or widows of ex-combatants can be assisted.”

Government, through the Defence and War veterans ministry last month conducted a vetting exercise, which critics described as a political gimmick to lure ex-combatants to vote for the ruling party in the 2023 elections.

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