Trouble brewing in Zanu PF ahead of congress…as MenBelievED organises Mnangagwa solidarity march

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MenBelieveED, an organisation supporting President Mnangagwa’s vision of economic development, is preparing to host a presidential solidarity march on Saturday at the Robert Mugabe Square in Harare in appreciation of the President’s efforts in achieving an upper-middle income economy.

The solidarity march will be held under the theme “Marching towards a victorious 2023”.

At least 100 000 delegates from across the country are expected to participate in the march.

Each province will mobilise a minimum of 10 000 delegates.

Those in the diaspora will attend the event virtually.

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Designated assembly points will be announced in due course.

MenBelieveED secretary general Mr Bethel Jaricha said the main purpose of the solidarity march is to show both internal and external forces that Zimbabweans were fully behind President Mnangagwa’s leadership.

Success stories of the Second Republic’s achievements will be shared during the solidarity march.

“This will enhance the visibility of his efforts in attaining vision 2030,” Mr Jaricha said.

“By coming out in our numbers as we target the #5 million votes in the 2023 general elections, a resounding win is guaranteed since such an event will silence the country’s detractors.

“We are doing this as a way of endorsing President Mnangagwa as the sole candidate for 2023 harmonised elections. We are happy with our President, we are happy with the developmental progress taking place across the country.”

The New Dispensation, under President Mnangagwa, has entrenched the spirit of development in Zimbabwe in the past years, such that what some thought could not be achieved is now a common occurrence.

Everywhere in the country, there is something about development taking place in various sectors, especially with the availing of devolution funds to the lower tiers of governance.

MenBelieveED spokesperson Mr Timothy Nyakudzuka said the solidarity march will be a national event.

“We are going to be marching from designated points to be announced in due course,” he said.

The march is in solidarity with President Mnangagwa based on the negative reports from the country’s detractors.

“What he promised when he came into power, is what is being delivered.”

Various artists are lined up to provide entertainment to the participants.

Meanwhile, party insiders have said Mnangagwa is increasingly using parallel structures after some Zanu PF organs resisted the imposition of his allies ahead of the ruling party’s congress.

Mnangagwa is accused of imposing his ally John Paradza as leader of the Zanu PF youth league, sparking resistance from party structures.

Meetings to introduce Paradza and his new youth league executive ended in violence in Manicaland and Masvingo as Zanu PF factions clashed openly to demonstrate the chasm.

In Mutare, violent scenes erupted during an election to replace former Mutare district coordination committee secretary for youth affairs Danmore Mambondiani, who recently won a position in the national executive.

In Masvingo, violence marred a party youth meeting held at Masvingo Polytechnic where they had met to elect a new provincial youth leader.

The post was left vacant after Paradza’s elevation.

Ruling party insiders said Mnangagwa was using parallel structures such as MenBelievED to organise his 2023 election campaign because of growing mistrust within Zanu PF structures following the emergence of a faction allegedly aligned to Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga.

Other groups that are campaigning for Mnangagwa outside Zanu PF structures are Young Women for ED and Varakashi for ED, among others.

In the past, similar marches were organised by party organs at the height of factional fights in Zanu PF that pitted late president Robert Mugabe and Mnangagwa.

Mugabe was eventually toppled in a coup in 2017, which paved the way for his deputy.

In 2016, former Zanu PF youth secretary Kudzai Chipanga organised a “million-man march” in support of Mugabe amid manoeuvres by a camp linked to Mnangagwa to remove him.

Chipanga also organised youth interface rallies where Mugabe’s wife, Grace would openly dress down alleged Mnangagwa allies.

In 2007, Zanu PF Bulawayo chairperson Jabulani Sibanda organised a similar march in support of Mugabe whose support was waning.

A recently leaked internal police memorandum showed that the ruling Zanu PF party’s popularity is waning at the grassroots following its cell audit that was conducted in June.

Political analyst Sydicks Muradzikwa said the solidarity march in support of Mnangagwa was senseless when the country was battling various social, political and economic crises.

“The planned solidarity march is an idea born out of extreme actions of solidarity and misguided ultra-patriotism ideologies among President Mnangagwa’s camp,” Muradzikwa said.

“Any action intended to show genuine solidarity should be anchored on political common sense and rationality.

“Regrettably, this is what happens when public support for politics is incentivised and is further devoid of political reasoning and common sense.”

Another analyst Vivid Gwede said the solidarity march showed that trouble was brewing in Zanu PF.

“We would surmise what else do the president’s supporters perceive as his difficulties if not the spectres of factionalism in his party or the approaching elections where his chances are being daily chipped away by the economic collapse,” Gwede said.

“A government and leadership that are doing well do not need solidarity marches.”

Mnangagwa is eyeing a second full term in next year’s elections where he is set to face Citizens Coalition for Change leader Nelson Chamisa, whom he narrowly beat in the disputed 2018 elections.

An Afrobarometer survey in June showed that 33% of respondents said they would vote for Chamisa against 30% for the Zanu PF leader.

— Herald/The Standard


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