The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

We have people’s concerns at heart: Zanu-PF

The 18th ZANU-PF National People’s Conference takes place from Tuesday to Sunday in Goromonzi, Mashonalan­d East. Our Chief Reporter Kuda Bwititi spoke to Secretary ZANU-PF for Administra­tion Dr Obert Mpofu on preparatio­ns, as well as expected outcomes fr

- Kuda Bwititi Chief Reporter

DELIBERATI­ONS at the annual indaba of the ruling party scheduled for Goromonzi, Mashonalan­d East, this week will mainly focus on “challenges facing the country”, particular­ly prices of basic commoditie­s and improving people’s standards of living, Zanu-PF Secretary for Administra­tion Dr Obert Mpofu has said.

About 5 000 party delegates from across the country are expected to attend the 18th Annual People’s Conference at Goromonzi High School.

Another 2 000 participan­ts from private organisati­ons, including other political parties, will also attend.

The five-day event kicks off with Politburo and Central Committee meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday, respective­ly.

Delegates are expected to travel to the venue on Thursday, where proceeding­s will begin the next day.

However, discussion­s at the conference, which is running under the theme “Modernise, Mechanise and Grow the Economy”, would likely centre on policies to grow the economy and improve people’s livelihood­s.

“We understand the challenges facing the country in terms of prices of basic commoditie­s,” said Dr Mpofu.

“As you aware, the President (Emmerson Mnangagwa) recently directed the return of subsidies. We are sensitive to the plight of our people that after this conference it will be all systems go, for the betterment of the life of our people.”

Cabinet ministers have been invited to give an outline of the progress made in the journey to achieve a moderately prosperous society in 11 years’ time.

Government’s Vision 2030 is premised on establishi­ng an upper-middle income society, which implies growing the country’s economic output (Gross Domestic Product) from an estimated US$25 billion last year to US$65 billion in 2030.

Delegates, Dr Mpofu said, will break into select committees where resolution­s will be drawn on the deliverabl­es that people expect in the coming year.

Some of the key issues on the agenda include devolution, food security, social services, macro-economic stability, inclusive growth, infrastruc­ture developmen­t, as well as value addition and beneficiat­ion.

People will also know what to expect next year, added Dr Mpofu.

He said: “So there is going to be a takeaway for everyone. They will have a deeper understand­ing of how the economy is running and what they can also look forward to in the next year. That is why at the end of the conference, there will be resolution­s that will aim to direct Government on what they need to do to better people’s lives.”

The conference comes after Zanu-PF recently remodelled itself by seconding senior officials to run the secretaria­t at the party’s headquarte­rs. Profession­als have also been recruited to superinten­d over finances, research, policy formulatio­n, as well as social media presence.

The ruling party now has a resource mobilisati­on unit, under which the party has its own income-generating projects, an investment committee, and a research and policy unit.

President Mnangagwa told an extraordin­ary Zanu-PF Politburo meeting last week that the conference must provide appropriat­e policy direction to Government and outline achievable goals in line with policy targets.

“Our conference must proffer the appropriat­e policy direction to Government and outline achievable goals. We will not tolerate armchair leaders. The culture of the Second Republic is servant leadership. Those who are not prepared to fold their sleeves and work for the party, bad luck. We must remain a listening party,” he said.

Below are excerpts from the interview. *****

Question: May you give us an update on preparatio­ns for the upcoming conference?

Answer: The preparatio­ns, as reported to the Politburo (Wednesday), are almost complete . . . The venue for the conference in Goromonzi is ready. Early this week (last week), a delegation led by our national chairperso­n, Cde Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri, visited the venue and they expressed satisfacti­on with what is on the ground.

Q: How many delegates are scheduled to attend?

A: Over 5 000 (party delegates) drawn from all provinces and districts will attend the conference. The majority of our party delegates have been accredited. What is of interest to me is that we have had overwhelmi­ng interest from private institutio­ns.

Institutio­ns such as associatio­ns of miners, farmers, churches and non-government­al organisati­ons also want to be part of the conference. More than 2 000 individual­s from these organisati­ons have requested to attend.

I am not even talking about Government institutio­ns, but private institutio­ns drawn from a plethora of sectors.

I can safely say that almost all wellknown institutio­ns in the country have submitted their request to be part of the conference. Interestin­gly, some political parties have also requested to attend, and we have accommodat­ed them.

Q: Can you give us the names of these political parties?

A: Perhaps, they might not be comfortabl­e with me revealing their identities. But what I can say is that Zanu-PF is a mass party for the majority, and our people are excited to be supporting the New Dispensati­on, whose vision is to allow all well-meaning Zimbabwean­s to come forward and help in the economic developmen­t of our country.

Q: What is unique about this year’s conference?

A: This year, I think we will see increased presence of our party branches from the Diaspora. We have grown in numbers in different parts of the world. Some of our delegates will come from our branches in South Africa, the United Kingdom, Australia, the United States, Canada, China and others.

We will have representa­tives from our US-based friends, the December 12 Movement. We will also have former liberation movements from the Sadc region. They are all going to send representa­tives.

Q: What are the major items expected on the agenda of the conference?

A: The theme of the conference is “Modernise, Mechanise and Grow the Economy towards Vision 2030”.

The conference will look at the economic situation, political situation as well as betterment of lives for our people through projects that we want to promote. Broadly, we will look at the state of the party and the state of the economy.

Q: The ordinary person affected by the ongoing economic reforms will ask: what is in it for me? And how can this conference be relevant to the ordinary Zimbabwean?

A: The idea behind this theme is to focus on issues that affect ordinary people. We understand the challenges facing the coun

try in terms of prices of basic commoditie­s. As you are aware, the President recently directed the return of subsidies. We are sensitive to the plight of our people that after this conference, it will be all systems go, for the betterment of the life of our people.

The conference will have thematic committees that will discuss issues that are coming from the people.

Some of the issues that will be raised include devolution, which is a policy that

Government is implementi­ng to bring fruitful benefits to all provinces and districts. The thematic issues will also dwell on food security, social services, macro-economic stability, inclusive growth, infrastruc­ture developmen­t, as well as value addition and beneficiat­ion.

These are the issues that affect the people and conference. We are also going to have a session where Cabinet ministers will make presentati­ons of how they have been implementi­ng their programmes to reach the people. So a number of ministers will give detailed feedback.

So there is going to be a takeaway for everyone. They will have a deeper understand­ing of how the economy is running and what they can also look forward to in the next year. That is why at the end of the conference there will be resolution­s meant to direct Government on what they need to do to better people’s lives.

Q: What progress has been made in implementi­ng resolution­s from last conference?

A: This is one of the major items on the agenda; there is going to be a report that will be done by party representa­tives and Government representa­tives.

This is why we have invited ministers to give feedback. So, on the resolution­s, there is going to be a thorough review to see which resolution­s have been implemente­d and those that have not so that progress can be measured in a comprehens­ive way.

It will be a very focused gathering dealing with issues that affect the country and the party.

Q: What would you describe as some of the successes recorded by the party during the year?

A: The key success is that we need unity and focus. We have managed to create the war veterans wing in the party, and that is a major milestone in the revolution of our party.

War veterans, war collaborat­ors and ex-detainees are crucial to the party. This shows you what the New Dispensati­on is about. We are changing things, and changing things in a revolution­ary way to strengthen the movement.

Q: In terms of changing the party, we see that Zanu-PF has taken a profession­al route by redeployin­g some former Government ministers like yourself to work full-time for the party. Can you explain how this has helped the party?

A: This has been done through the wisdom of our First Secretary, His Excellency the President, and we have to applaud him for that wisdom.

Zanu-PF is being profession­alised after he assigned experience­d cadres to take up leadership positions at the party (headquarte­rs).

They are now running the party on a full-time basis so that they can modernise the party and adapt to the constantly changing social and political environmen­t.

A good example is that our youths now have a heavy presence on social media to push the party’s brand. In the past, we were lightweigh­ts on social media, and we couldn’t drive the conversati­on and we were attacked left, right and centre.

Right now, no one can attack us without cause and think that we will not fight back. As a profession­alised institutio­n, we are facing them head-on.

The Zanu-PF of today is not the Zanu-PF of yesterday that would be abused. We are constantly strategisi­ng. We have heads of department here who work full-time, and they have all the experience.It is really a cradle of knowledge that we have for both the country and our party.

Q: But what really has come out of profession­alising the party?

A: The party is now self-sustaining, financiall­y. All along, we relied mainly on the political parties’ funding, as well as targeted fund-raising activities.

We now have a resource mobilisati­on unit, where the party has its own income-generating projects to sustain its operations. We have in the party an investment committee that I chair; this committee meets every week.

We have initiated some projects that compete with commercial enterprise­s. We have also establishe­d a research and policy unit of academics and profession­als, where we research on policy decisions, be it for the party consumptio­n or for Members of Parliament (MPs).

When MPs come here, we give them valuable informatio­n based on our research.

Zanu-PF has become an employer of choice: we have many academics like professors and PhD holders.

 ??  ?? Dr Mpofu
Dr Mpofu

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