OPPOSITION MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa yesterday scoffed at suggestions by President Emmerson Mnangagwa that he was unpatriotic to the country and pandering to the whims of his Western handlers.
Chamisa was responding to Mnangagwa’s Independence eve
interview broadcast by the State media on Saturday, where the Zanu PF leader
said unless MDC Alliance members cut their ties with the West, it would be
difficult for his administration to recognise them as “proper Zimbabweans”.
Mnangagwa said dialogue with the youthful opposition leader
was only possible under the Political Actors Dialogue (Polad) — a platform for
all parties which contested the 2018 presidential election.
Chamisa has, however, rubbished Polad as “an illegitimate platform for genuine
dialogue”. He also accused Mnangagwa of ignoring citizens’ calls for a genuine
and inclusive government.
“Why is he (Mnangagwa) not friends with progressive nations
himself,” Chamisa asked rhetorically.
“Who are his friends? He is busy allocating friends to us,
so who are his friends? Why is he giving us all the nations in the world? I
want to thank him for elevating, honouring and acknowledging our capacity to
build bridges and have warm relations with other nations.
“Our focus is to resolve our issues as Zimbabweans through
convergence and building a new consensus to give meaning to our independence
and sacrifices of our heroes and heroines who perished for a cause so great.
“Let us build bridges in Zimbabwe and my message to ED is,
stop burning bridges, stop being destructive, stop dividing the country, stop
hate language and hatred. Don’t be vindictive, don’t be a victim of ageism. We
are young but not babies.”
Chamisa said despite winning the 2018 elections and being
denied the victory after the results were reportedly manipulated in favour of
Mnangagwa, his party was still committed to inclusive and genuine dialogue to
resolve the Zimbabwean crisis.
“We have always invited him to smoke the peace pipe, but he
is carrying a machete and sjamboks and that is the problem. He thinks every
problem is a nail that needs a hammer. Violence has no winner and one thing
about violence is that no one has monopoly (over it).
“He mistakes us as an opposition. We are not an opposition,
but an alternative. That lady (Thokozani Khupe) and that guy (Douglas Mwonzora)
he created are his ‘opposition’. He says there must be a loyal opposition,
loyal to who? We are loyal and patriotic to Zimbabwe and its people. Zimbabwe
needs leaders, not rulers. Only in a dictatorship would you find alternative
ideas treated as unpatriotic,” Chamisa said.
In his pre-recorded interview, Mnangagwa defended Polad,
saying it was a platform where “genuinely patriotic Zimbabweans come and
participate”.
“We have created a platform where every genuine patriotic
Zimbabwean can come and participate and use their talents and contribute to the
global national vision. It’s not a
Mnangagwa vision, it is not a Zanu PF vision; it is a national vision for our
people. In a democracy, we debate issues and the best debate on the day takes
the day.
“That is what we must do and we have created a platform so that
nobody is left behind. For instance, it does not follow that everybody should
be saying yes, yes, yes to everything I say.
I would not want yes people around me, I want people who argue with me
and I argue with them.”
He described Chamisa and his deputy Tendai Biti as surrogates of the West, accusing them of inviting sanctions on Zimbabwe and inciting violent demonstrations which caused loss of property and lives.
“Well, you have mentioned this one Zimbabwean (Chamisa);
you forget that he and his vice-president (Tendai Biti) went to America to ask
for sanctions to continue to be imposed on Zimbabwe. So, before they cut that
umbilical cord with the Americans, it is difficult to be proper Zimbabweans.
“We still have countries like the UK and the US who still
continue to insist on imposition of sanctions. They have their surrogates in
Zimbabwe persuading them to continue to impose sanctions on Zimbabwe and the
reasons are best known to them, who want the people of Zimbabwe to suffer,
perhaps to ride on the suffering of the people of Zimbabwe for them to come to
office,” Mnangagwa said.
The US and the UK have maintained tough economic sanctions
on Zanu PF bigwigs and companies linked to the ruling party over gross human
rights violations, violent land seizures and disrespect for property rights.
Addressing delegates at State House yesterday, Mnangagwa
said his government would not deviate from the ethos of the country’s
liberation struggle.
“As the second republic, we will never betray that which
made the many sons and daughters of our motherland to wage the protracted
liberation struggle, paying the supreme sacrifice. We will always protect the significance and
sacred spirituality of our land.”
Mnangagwa also said the signing of the Global Compensation
Agreement on July 29, 2020 with white former commercial farmers was
re-affirmation of the irreversibility of the land reform programme as well as a
symbol of commitment to constitutionalism, the respect of the rule of law and
property rights. Newsday
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