Self-Exiled former Zanu PF politburo member and Cabinet minister
Jonathan Moyo has defended MDC Alliance presidential candidate Nelson
Chamisa’s performance during a recent BBC current affairs programme,
HARDtalk, saying the opposition leader did his best given that most of
the questions thrown at him were “inane”.
During his recent visit to the United Kingdom, Chamisa had a
steamy 30-minute interview with the British public service broadcaster’s
Stephen Sackur on the hard-hitting current affairs programme.
Consequently, some Chamisa loyalists were quick to describe the
interview as “embedded journalism” based on the personal sentiments
that Sackur uttered in which he described Chamisa’s electoral promises
as “silly” and equated them to the fictitious novel Alice’s Adventures
in Wonderland written by Lewis Carroll.
Over the weekend, Moyo who has always blamed Britain for
clandestinely conspiring with President Emmerson Mnangagwa to
consolidate his grip on “illegitimate” power, suggested on his Twitter
handle that the interview was a lucid exhibition of the fishy
relationship between the former colonial master and the current
administration.
“(British ambassador) Catriona Laing’s role in the November 15 coup and
UK government’s hurry to recognise the coup government are
well-documented, but yet to be fully told. Meanwhile, the chips have
begun to fall into place and Sackur’s inane BBC HARDtalk with Nelson
Chamisa is a telling case in point,” Moyo said.
Moyo went on to draw parallels between this year’s looming
elections and the maiden 1980 elections in which Britain was also blamed
for trying to undermine Robert Mugabe’s populist influence in favour of
the then incumbent Abel Muzorewa and he warned that such practices
will end in shame.
“After Stephen Sackur’s crass BBC HARDtalk with Nelson Chamisa,
there is growing chatter (that) Catriona Laing is behaving more like
Junta PF’s (Zanu PF) commissar to Britain than UK’s ambassador to
Zimbabwe. They’ve forgotten how such support for incumbent Muzorewa in
1980 ended in UK shame,” Moyo warned.
Chamisa’s interview on BBC continues to receive mixed reactions
on social media with MDC-T activist and former broadcaster Eric Knight,
saying: “It seeks to expose and because of that, it thrives on two
facets namely, “extensive research and the iron-fistedness’ of the
presenter.”
“Don’t forget it is the same programme that Pakistan President
Musharaff reminded the host that ‘I am President’, the same programme
that (Kenya opposition leader Raila) Odinga went quiet in front of the
cameras and the same programme in which Hilary Clinton became violent,”
Knight posted on Facebook. Newsday
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