MDC-T
leader and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has again called on rivals Welshman
Ncube and Dumiso Dabengwa to join him in a broader coalition against President
Robert Mugabe and his Zanu PF party. Tsvangirai made the call as he presented
Mavambo Kusile leader and former Zanu PF politburo member Simba Makoni to
thousands of supporters during a campaign rally at Rusape’s Vengere Stadium on
Monday.
Said
the MDC-T leader: “I was mandated by the standing committee to seek a grand
coalition with all the major parties to make sure we rally behind one
Presidential candidate.
"There
is no need to split the vote when our common objective is to achieve real
change and build a New Zimbabwe. “In the national interest, I carried out that
mandate and managed to form a coalition with Dr Simba Makoni's MKD party and
ZANU Ndonga.
"As
such, we are sponsoring Dr Makoni for the Makoni Central constituency and ZANU
Ndonga's Reketai Semwayo in Chipinge Central. “The door is still open to other
parties we were negotiating with to join the coalition in the broader national
interest. We need unity of purpose among all the major parties to achieve a New
Zimbabwe."
Tsvangirai
made similar pleas at a campaign stop in Gweru on Sunday saying: “If Ncube and
Dabengwa really want to change the lives of Zimbabwean, they should join hands
with us and help unseat Mugabe.” The MDC-T leader formed an alliance with
Makoni and a Zanu Ndonga official after reported talks towards a broader
coalition involving Ncube’s MDC formation and Dabengwa’s ZAPU collapsed. But
with a week to go before the key vote, an alliance with Ncube appears virtually
impossible, in part because of the bitterness the formation still feels about
the way Tsvangirai treated them over the last few years.
“Look at how they
treated us after our congress [in 2009],” Ncube said in a recent interview with
the Daily News. “Morgan and his team were saying the leader of the MDC is
Arthur Mutambara; there is no other, they will work with him until the courts
have determined. And we are saying the courts still have not determined. “So if
Mutambara is the leader of the MDC, go and form a coalition with him, I’m sure
he’s willing to do that. Tsvangirai has been in coalition against us for the
last two-and-half years. “(Again) We disagree on just about everything [with
Tsvangirai]. We, as a party, say there is no situation which can justify the
use of violence as an instrument of political organisation. We believe in
collective democratic decision-making processes.
“I,
as the president, cannot overrule the collective decisions either of the
Standing Committee, the National Executive or the National Council. And there
are so many things. “The only thing which is in common is that once-upon-a-time
we were in the same party. We drifted apart and eventually split because we
realised that whereas we will say the same things, we will practice different
things. Meanwhile, the MDC-T leader will this week head into the heartland of
Mugabe's support as he winds up his campaign for the July 31 vote. Days after
drawing huge crowds in his traditional stronghold Bulawayo and the swing
Midlands Province, Tsvangirai's foray into Mashonaland East will test the level
of inroads he has made in what is seen as Mugabe backyard. On Tuesday, Tsvangirai
addresses rallies in Kotwa, Murehwa and Mutoko. He wades into Zaire, Hwedza and
Mahusekwa. Mashonaland East is one of the three Mashonaland provinces which
have remained loyal to Mugabe and his Zanu PF party in previous elections. These
are the same provinces which suffered the worst of the 2008 election violence
which Tsvangirai says claimed more than 200 of his supporters and displaced
thousands of others. Like
many other areas countrywide, the provinces have not recorded serious cases of
violence in this campaign, although rights groups claim Zanu PF is using
memories of the 2008 clampdown to induce fear among voters.
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