POLICE last week blocked Zapu’s 60th anniversary celebrations that were set to take place at the home of the late Father Zimbabwe Joshua Nkomo in Kezi, Matabeleland South province.
Nkomo led PF Zapu from 1961 as its founding leader until
the party merged with Zanu PF in 1987 following the signing of the Unity
Accord.
He died in 1999.
His son, Sibangilizwe, said police blocked the planned
celebrations scheduled for Nkomo’s St Joseph homestead in Nyongolo area citing,
COVID-19 restrictions on large gatherings. Various organisations and political
parties from across southern Africa were expected to grace the event.
“We notified the police a month ago about the celebrations
that were expected to be held on December 18 with only about 200 people
expected to attend,” Nkomo said.
“We had to cancel the event, what surprises me is that they
had an event at Makorokoro in the same week about 50km from Nyongolo area where
there were about a thousand cars, including helicopters and people that were
bussed there just to witness the commissioning of a garden.
“Does that mean they cannot be affected by COVID?”
President Emmerson Mnangagwa was in Makorokoro last week to
launch what the State-run ZBC described as the “Matabeleland South marketing
project.”
He toured the vegetable garden and addressed a rally
attended by hundreds of Zanu PF supporters, many of them bussed from
neighbouring villages and some from as far as Plumtree and Maphisa.
On Wednesday in Bulawayo police also stopped a Gukurahundi
memorial that was set to take place at Stanley Hall, Makokoba suburb.
On Monday, armed police also disrupted a Christmas party
for the elderly and vulnerable that was being hosted by MDC Alliance leader
Nelson Chamisa. Newsday
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