No Script

Please Wait...

Al-Ahed Telegram

Zimbabwe: Opposition Party Slams Government’s ’Insufficient’ Assurance

Zimbabwe: Opposition Party Slams Government’s ’Insufficient’ Assurance
folder_openAfrica... access_time5 years ago
starAdd to favorites

Local Editor

Zimbabwe's largest opposition group, known as the MDC Alliance, said the recent assurance from the Zanu-PF government that it would concede defeat if it loses at the upcoming polls was inadequate. 

Zimbabwe: Opposition Party Slams Government’s ’Insufficient’ Assurance

It says that given the role of the military in seizing power last November, the Commander of the Zimbabwe Defense Forces General Valerio Sibanda needs to make an "unequivocal and unconditional undertaking to the people that the military recognizes and accepts the sovereignty of the people of Zimbabwe to freely choose their government." Such an assurance from Sibanda would be "enough" according to MDC Alliance spokesman, Welshman Ncube. 

He said: "While we appreciate that this statement [made in London on Monday by foreign minister Sibusiso Moyo] represents progress from a functionary of Zanu-PF and a former military strongman... that undertaking [from Moyo] is insufficient..."

Moyo, a retired general and who was the public face of the armed forces which took control of Zimbabwe last November, told a public meeting in London on Monday that the results of the election would be respected even if Zanu-PF lost and its leader, President Emmerson Mnangagwa failed to be elected president. 

"If an opposition candidate is victorious in the elections President Mnangagwa, is prepared to accept. Political contestation must not override national interests. People can come and go, but the state is more important," he told a sizeable crowd of mostly Zimbabweans at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House. 

Presidential, parliamentary, senate and local government elections are expected in July. 

Former military leaders, now in Mnangagwa's government, including vice president General Constantino Chiwenga, who retired from the armed forces shortly after former president Robert Mugabe resigned from power, had previously said they would not salute former MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai if he won elections. 

In this regard, Mnangagwa has repeatedly said the upcoming elections would be "free and fair."

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

Comments