THE Zanu PF youth league says it will today release a list
of corrupt captains of industry and Zanu PF leaders it says are in bed with
cartels involved in economic sabotage.
The youths claim to be in possession of a damaging dossier
which could bring things to a head in the ruling party and government.
Politburo member and Zanu PF youth league deputy secretary,
Lewis Matutu, who is leading the crusade, told delegates at a youth empowerment
programme in Marondera at the weekend that they had been silent hoping action
would be taken by responsible authorities, including the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc).
“If we keep quiet, we become accomplices, because when you
are in leadership, you have to act to protect the nation and the people and
that time has come for us to again step up that fight against corruption,” he
said.
Matutu said after naming a number of Zanu PF leaders, and
businesspeople last year who included the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ)
governor John Mangudya, party secretary for administration Obert Mpofu and
other ministers, no action was taken, forcing them to engage in a new name and
shame wave to keep the topic alive.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa in June 2019 appointed a Zanu
PF commission made up of central committee members to investigate the
corruption allegations and submit a report, but more than six months later, no
action has been taken.
“The commission appointed by the President has not yet done
anything. It has not even met for whatever reason. This is what has forced us
to come out, saying it is taking forever to take action while cartels are using
those in political power to hide from the long arm of the law. We can’t have
that! It’s not the Zimbabwe we envisage,” Matutu said.
He said the youth league would name and confront the
corrupt today regardless of the consequences.
“It is our responsibility as young people to end this
cancer called corruption. Corruption has taken so many things away from our
country. We have been disadvantaged for so many years because we have a few
individuals with long (fingers). It is not easy to talk about it, but it’s
possible. This Monday, we have a big bombshell. We are going to stand our
ground and tell them that enough is enough,” the Zanu PF youth league
second-in-command said.
“We can’t allow three or four people to loot everything
while we watch, it must end. I don’t care what will happen on Tuesday, even if
I am no longer in my position by Tuesday, but you will have heard what I would
have said, that’s what is critical.”
Since taking office in 2017, Mnangagwa has insisted that
fighting corruption would be his number one priority, but it appears he is
losing the battle, as the public and his own party appear to have lost
confidence, especially in Zacc.
In its central committee report at the conference held in
Goromonzi last year, Zanu PF said the perception that “government lacks
commitment to tackle the endemic problem of corruption has been posing a
serious threat to party mobilisation efforts”.
Matutu said corruption had become commonplace and a way of
life which need radical engagement to eradicate, saying politics must not stand
in the way.
“Corruption is everywhere and it’s now a culture that
people are now used to, for so many years, but it must end with our generation.
How does it end? If you are at an institution, say at school, but you see
certain things happening and you can’t even speak out against such things, how
do we expect you to be able to speak out against bigger things when you grow
up?” he said.
MDC youth assembly leader Obey Sithole, however, dismissed
the Zanu PF youth league as attention-seekers without the courage to name the
real corrupt people.
“Naming or not naming, it remains fundamentally
inconsequential because we have seen this happening before, but no decisive
action was taken against the so-called corrupt people. Zanu PF are the authors
of corruption and expecting them to genuinely fight corruption is tantamount to
expecting to see an igloo in Al-Aziziyah,” Sithole said.
Al-Aziziyah is a town in Libya. He said nobody in Zanu PF was clean.
“Absolutely, no one in Zanu PF has the moral ground to
speak against corruption because it is their unifying lifestyle. I take the
said naming and shaming slated for today as a well-orchestrated and desperate
attempt by Zanu PF to divert the nation’s focus on real issues bedevilling the
nation,” Sithole said.
“We have the topical issues around the increase in tuition
fees against the background of low remuneration of civil servants. We have
another serious issue of doctors who are still demanding better working
conditions. These are the issues that they are afraid of addressing, hence they
want to divert our attention for a moment.” Newsday
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