Biti says Zimbabwe dealing with largest existential risk since Gukurahundi – Nehanda Radio
Former Finance Minister Tendai Biti has warned that Zimbabwe is dealing with its largest existential risk because the Eighties Gukurahundi atrocities, citing the continued succession battle inside the ruling Zanu-PF occasion.
Biti’s alarm follows intensified factionalism inside Zimbabwe’s ruling occasion.
“The Third Term agenda is alive and kicking. It is gross naivety to think Zanu-PF will not pursue this project to the end. This means that Zimbabwe faces its biggest existential threat since Gukurahundi. Democrats must reset, reorganize and defend the constitution,” Biti mentioned.
The Gukurahundi genocide (1982-1987) was a brutal crackdown by late former President Robert Mugabe towards the Ndebele ethnic minority.
Mugabe’s Fifth Brigade perpetrated atrocities: massacres, disappearances, torture and rape, killing an estimated 20,000 civilians. The regime focused suspected dissidents, consolidating energy and suppressing opposition.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa and Vice President Constantino Chiwenga are locked in a bitter succession battle.
Mnangagwa’s alleged plan to increase his time period of workplace past the constitutionally mandated two-term restrict is being rejected by Chiwenga. The former Army General is taken into account the frontrunner within the race to exchange Mnangagwa.
But the Zanu-PF chief is reluctant to endorse Chiwenga as his successor, elevating suspicions that he needs to cling onto energy past 2028.
Mnangagwa’s warnings towards indiscipline and opportunism underscored occasion divisions on the twenty first Zanu-PF Annual People’s Conference in Bulawayo final week.
Mnangagwa loyalists pushed by means of a constitutional modification decision extending his rule past Zimbabwe’s two-term presidential restrict.
During the convention, Chiwenga supporters confronted exclusion, together with Harare provincial government officers.
Exiled former Zanu-PF nationwide political commissar Saviour Kasukuwere condemned this push as “political irresponsibility” aimed toward undermining Mnangagwa.
Kasukuwere demanded accountability, noting Mnangagwa persistently rejected extending his rule.
Patrick Chinamasa, Zanu-PF’s Secretary for Legal Affairs, has, nonetheless, reassured that Mnangagwa stays dedicated to constitutional integrity, emphasising his function in drafting Zimbabwe’s structure.