Zimbabwe is going for elections in four to five months’ time and we have to preach peace, peace and peace,” the new president, who served as Mugabe’s right-hand man for decades before taking power, said during a visit to neighbouring Mozambique.
Successive polls have been marred by violence and intimidation, leading to sanctions and the diplomatic isolation of the former British colony.
The vote is being seen as a key test of Mnangagwa’s democratic credentials and it is crucial to unlocking badly needed financial assistance from international financial institutions as well as repairing relations with western powers.
“We will ensure that Zimbabwe delivers free, credible, fair and indisputable elections to ensure Zimbabwe engages the world as a qualified democratic state,” Mnangagwa was quoted as saying by the Herald, a government-run newspaper.
Under the constitution, Zimbabwe should hold elections between 22 July and 22 August, but parliament can elect to dissolve itself, triggering an early vote. The ruling Zanu-PF party holds a two-thirds majority in parliament.
The British foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, has said the UK could take steps to stabilise Zimbabwe’s currency system and extend a loan to help it clear World Bank and African Development Bank debts, but such support depended on “democratic progress”.
In an interview with the Financial Times [£], Mnangagwa said he was keen for Zimbabwe to rejoin the Commonwealth, 16 years after its suspension from the association of former British colonies over human rights abuses, and that Brexit would help relations with the UK.
The UK] will need us. And we will make sure we become very close to them. So that what they’ve lost with Brexit they can come and recover from Zimbabwe,” he said.
Mnangagwa confirmed Commonwealth observers would be invited to join EU and UN counterparts to monitor the forthcoming polls.
In a further initiative which may improve Zimbabwe’s image overseas, officials are considering the establishment of a special tribunal to determine compensation for former white commercial farmers stripped of land since 2000, according to a government document.
Under Mugabe, ruling party supporters forcibly took land, often violently, from white farmers.
Last week Zimbabwe’s electoral commission announced a month-long extension to its voter registration exercise, saying that only 5 million of the anticipated 7 million people had registered under a new biometric system designed to reduce fraud.
Though Mnangagwa was reported to have told a meeting of leaders of the Zanu-PF party that he was committed to reforms, many observers are unsure the former spy chief has either the desire or ability to compel the party to forgo the tactics of intimidation and violence that have contributed so significantly to its grip o
- A man paid N2.1 million for a woman who played him, and now her family won't give the money back - His story led to another man sharing a similar incident, where he paid N1. 8 million for a woman who cheated on him - Their stories led to social media users thinking fathers were using their daughters to get rich A man paid N2.1 miilion for a woman he loved in then he found out she was busy with someone else. Now, her family won't give his money back. Metro FM posted the man's story on their Facebook page. In 2016, an unidentified man paid a lot of money to marry the woman of his dreams, but after he found out he was not the only man in her life, he asked for his N2.1 million back. However, her family has since refused to pay back the lobola he paid for their daughter. "I paid N2.1 million for the woman I loved back home in KZN in 2016 but found out that she’s busy with someone else. All I want is my bride price money back", he said. And, he is apparently...

I pray let there be free and fair.
ReplyDeleteI pray let there be free and fair.
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