PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa will soon travel around the country to meet people and unpack Government’s programmes following the successful unveiling of Zanu-PF’s 2018 Campaign and Election Manifesto in Harare on Friday.
In a statement on his official Facebook page on Friday, President Mnangagwa, who is Zanu-PF’s presidential candidate for the forthcoming harmonised elections, said the manifesto outlines the party’s vision for Zimbabwe in the new dispensation.
The Zanu-PF 2018 campaign and manifesto is running under the theme: “Unite, Fight Corruption, develop, Re-engage and Create Jobs.”
The business-friendly election manifesto seeks to promote investment and business growth in line with President Mnangagwa’s vision to transform Zimbabwe into a middle income country by 2030.
In the manifesto, Zanu-PF said if given a new mandate, it would strive to achieve fiscal and debt sustainability and industrial and capacity utilisation of 90 percent by 2023.
Other targets include improving health delivery in line with Sustainable Development Goals by 2023, delivering 1,5 million medium-income housing units in the same period.
The manifesto will also seek to promote unity through capacitating the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission to execute its constitutional mandate in dealing with post independence era conflicts.
The manifesto acknowledges the various challenges that the country has faced over the years that include MDC-engineered sanctions, corruption, State capture by the G40 cabal, HIV and Aids and rising cases of non-communicable diseases and climate change. It however, commended Zimbabweans for their resilience.
Cde Mnangagwa also took to the micro-blogging site Twitter yesterday and reiterated that the harmonised elections would be free and fair with Zanu-PF emerging victorious.
“The upcoming elections will be free and fair, and I am confident that with this ambitious and achievable plan for Zimbabwe, we will be victorious. The voice of the people is the voice of God!” he said.
Cde Mnangagwa who is also Zanu-PF’s First Secretary, has on several fora pledged to hold free, fair and non-violent elections this year, and to respect the outcome even if Zanu-PF loses.
In January during the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, the President said international observers, including from the European Union, will be invited to monitor the elections as the country seeks to entrench its democracy. He said the observers would have unfettered access to every place. Herald
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