Tanzanian President Dr John Magufuli has tipped President Mnangagwa to win elections slated for July 30.
Speaking at a press conference here yesterday, the East African
country’s fifth president after independence from Britain on December 9,
1961, said the rains that coincided with President Mnangagwa’s visit
portended victory for the Zanu-PF candidate.
President Mnangagwa, said President Magufuli, had a “human heart, a patriotic heart and the spirit of love”.
“Zimbabwe,” he added, “will show you back the love by overwhelming voting for you (in the next elections).”
President Magufuli thanked President Mnangagwa for taking time off
his busy schedule, especially at a time when Zimbabwe was in the middle
of preparations for the forthcoming elections, to accede to a request to
visit East Africa’s second-biggest economy.
This, he said, was “sufficient indication of the cooperation between the two countries”.
President Magufuli indicated that his guest, who was one of the
pioneers of the military camp at Bagamoyo in Tanzania in the early
1960s, will visit the historic place today.
Zimbabwe and Tanzania are inextricably linked as the latter used to
provide political, material and social support to Southern African
countries in their fight for independence.
The East African country notably hosted the OAU (now AU) Liberation
Committee, which supported liberation movements during the 30-year
period from 1963 to 1994.
President Mnangagwa is in Tanzania for a two-day State visit which ends today.
Former secretary-general of the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) Cde
Abdulrahman Kinana delivered the invitation when he met President
Mnangagwa at his Munhumutapa offices on May 23.
He has, however, since resigned as the head of the secretariat of the Tanzanian ruling party.
During his visit to Harare, Cde Kinana was accompanied by Cdes
Gaudensia Kabaka (CCM’s chairperson of the women’s wing), Edmund Mndolwa
(chairperson of the parents wing) and Kheri James (chairperson of the
youth wing).
A Tanzanian delegation to Harare earlier in the year was part of the
pre-election observation team led by Cde Ngemela Lubinga from Tanzania’s
ruling party CCM.
During their four-day visit, the delegation met the various political parties.
President Magufuli, who was unanimously elected as chairperson of
CCM, recently commended Zimbabwe for the peaceful transition that took
place in November last year.
He was elected President in October 2015 after garnering 58 percent
of the vote in elections that were largely considered to be the fiercest
to have been faced by the party in its 54 years in power. Herald
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