The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Mutambara roasts ‘shamelessl­y incompeten­t’ Mnangagwa govt

- BY TAFADZWA KACHIKO

FoRMeR deputy prime minister arthur Mutambara has described President emmerson Mnangagwa’s government as incompeten­t, corrupt, authoritar­ian and directionl­ess.

Mutambara made the claims in his third and final book in the trilogy titled In Search of the Elusive Zimbabwean Dream: An Autobiogra­phy of Thought Leadership.

He will launch volume three of the book titled Ideas & Solutions: Deputy Prime Minister and Beyond at the university of Johannesbu­rg on Tuesday, Harare on May 30 and bulawayo on June 2.

Mutambara will also launch the same book on June 8 in Sandton, South africa.

in an introducti­on seen by The Standard, the robotics professor said that the “zimbabwean Dream”, with a thriving economy continues to elude millions.

“Well, it never rains but it pours,” Mutambara said.

“This administra­tion has proven to be hopelessly and shamelessl­y incompeten­t, corrupt, authoritar­ian and directionl­ess.

“With the advent of the global Covid-19 pandemic in March 2020, the situation has degenerate­d further while being compounded by, among other factors, an insecure, edgy and divided securocrat­ic state, the brazen theft of Covid-19 funding, ethnonatio­nalism on steroids, unpreceden­ted looting of national resources and excessive use of force against citizens.

“evidently, this has led to a collapsed healthcare system, unrelentin­g poverty, and severe food insecurity, loss of livelihood­s and dramatic shrinking of democratic space.”

Mutambara also said the country was headed for disputed elections.

“as 2023 unfolds and general elections are beckoning, there is no let-up,” he said.

“We have an unconstitu­tional and botched-up delimitati­on report.

“The voters’ roll is not available to all political parties.”

Mutambara added: “at the core of this national tragedy is a government whose primary raison d’être is the feudal pursuit of the insatiable financial interests of Mnangagwa’s family and clan members; at the expense of national aspiration­s.”

Mutambara also criticised zanu PF’s critics for failing to provide an alternativ­e vision and a compelling strategy.

“in response to these apparent maladies and deficienci­es characteri­sing our activism and politics, this volume concentrat­es on proffering solutions and redemptive paradigms to africa and zimbabwe’s problems,” he said.

in the first book, Mutambara explores his thoughts and philosophi­cal dispositio­n over a period of 35 years and delivers a fascinatin­g, provocativ­e and rigorously engrossing tour de force.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe