Mutasa rejects ousted Mugabe’s offer 

Mutasa rejects ousted Mugabe’s offer 

Source: Mutasa rejects ousted Mugabe’s offer – DailyNews Live

Fungi Kwaramba      22 March 2018

HARARE – Former minister of State Security Didymus Mutasa has turned down
an invitation to join the newly-formed National Patriotic Front (NPF),
saying it is nothing but a tribal party doing the bidding for deposed
ex-president, Robert Mugabe.

A former close ally of Mugabe, the country’s first black Speaker of
Parliament told the Daily News yesterday that he would rather stay in
retirement than join the NPF because it was no different from Zanu PF.

Mutasa, 82, had a private meeting with NPF leader, retired
brigadier-general Ambrose Mutinhiri at his residence in Harare, sending
the rumour mill into  overdrive amid speculation that the former Marondera
West legislator had convinced him to join the new political formation.

“It is true that I met Mutinhiri, but I am not yet their member. I am
there for the people to consult. I meet anyone from Tendai Biti to Nelson
Chamisa but that does not mean I will be joining them,” Mutasa told the
Daily News.

“I think there is no big difference between the two parties – Zanu PF and
the NPF. The party is tribalistic. This is a party that is looking at a
particular region and not the whole country,” he added.

While Mugabe has denied any involvement in the new political outfit,
Mutasa – who worked closely with him from the 1970s to 2014 when they fell
out – insisted yesterday that the former president was the brains behind
the political outfit.

Presently, Mutinhiri and NPF spokesperson Jealousy Mawarire are the only
two political figures that have nailed their NPF colours to the mast
although it is believed that the majority of those who belonged to the
Generation 40 (G40) faction, which was resistant to President Emmerson
Mnangagwa’s succession bid, could be working for the NPF behind the
scenes.

On its part, the NPF has publicly declared it has the blessings of Mugabe,
claims that have riled Zanu PF which regards the 94-year-old’s
machinations as meant to divide its votes ahead of make-or-break elections
around June/July.

Mugabe has insisted that his removal last November was illegal and is
accusing Mnangagwa of having betrayed him.

Mutasa told the Daily News that Mugabe was being hoisted with his own
petard, considering how he manipulated the law during his 37 years of
misrule.

“It will take long to see Mugabe; he called me a donkey, he said so many
bad things about me. If I forgive him, I will then engage him but not now.
It is sad that he now sees that the people who are now leading are doing
what he used to do when he was still in power. He doesn’t want people to
do what he used to do to them. Why is he interfering in politics, he
deserves what he is getting, he is the one throwing the stones at the
kids, the kids didn’t go to his home,” said Mutasa.

Critics accuse Mugabe of running down the country and spawning poverty
through his populist policies, human and property rights abuses that
provoked the ire of western countries that went on to isolate the
landlocked southern African country.

Unemployment in Zimbabwe is still high and cash shortages persist despite
Mnangagwa’s spirited attempts at breathing life in an otherwise panting
economy.

Since his second coming into politics – Mugabe has invited the scorn and
umbrage of his former party – with some sections now agitating for his
expulsion from Zanu PF despite Mnangagwa’s vow to “uphold his legacy”.

At the dawn of the new dispensation, many thought Mutasa would retrace his
footsteps back to Zanu PF.

He, however, told the Daily News last year that he was still looking at
what Mnangagwa has to offer.

“Zanu PF is not as strong as it used to be right now but whether they win
the elections depends on what they do, if it was still active they would
win, they have strong winning points, they now know the person who was
causing trouble in Zanu PF and that would be an entry point,” said Mutasa.

“But right now, I am no longer actively involved, I am looking at what is
happening across the country in all political parties but it will not lead
to a truly democratic society, who will take us there, that’s is the
question, if Mnangagwa holds free and fair elections I will praise him for
that, I will salute him. I am sure he is capable because he has succeeded
in doing things that he has set himself to do.”

Meanwhile, Mawarire was not amused by claims by Mutasa that the NPF was a
tribal formation.

He said the party abhors tribalism; something he said was familiar in Zanu
PF.

“As NPF, we are building a national platform not a tribal citadel. We are
patriots who don’t identify with tribes or any such narrow ascription
meant to divide our people. We leave tribal politics to Zanu PF with its
blatant nepotism that has yielded a village Cabinet now referred to as
Moyo, Sibanda, Shumba and associates,” he said.

“We have built our party on the basis of skill and competency not some
primitive tribal or ethnic consideration. Right now, the two members of
the executive that have come out in the open . . . Ambrose and I, are we
both Zezuru? Not that we care about ethnic or tribal origins, but if we
were to even entertain their tribal arguments, I come from Masvingo and
Mutinhiri comes from Mashonaland East. Does that make both of us Zezuru?

“We haven’t as yet publicised the full complement of our young and vibrant
national executive yet tribalists have already started making tribal
remarks about people they are not even aware of. That should show you that
those making such allegations are the real tribalists who have no place in
a national and patriotic movement (such) as ours,” said Mawarire.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 2
  • comment-avatar
    bozongwana 6 years ago

    Vanhu vezimbabwe, 37 years was never messed up with mugabe alone.It was Zanu Pf which messed up our lives.His coming back to me is a hand of God to Zimbabweans. I am not saying his party will win, but his entrance has created an everlasting political fissure in Zanu Pf.It pains me to realise that majority of people who castigate mugabe are blind, unable to realise that all of our problems were not caused by Mugabe alone but the Zanu Pf which is in power today.All these people in Zanu Pf had fronted Mugabe supporting him with bad policies, knowing well that one day, they will remove him and people will blame him.

  • comment-avatar
    Mapingu 6 years ago

    Yes, Jealous Mawarire may not be tribalist as he claims. Actually, whether one is tribalist or not is most revealed by what they do when in position of power. Mawarire has not been in such position for most of us to be able to tell with certainty – only those close to him may know what he is, in that regard. However, what all and sundry know for sure about this guy is is: he is a politically bankrupt,power hungry, greedy & self-serving hoodlum who belongs to the worst type of political turncoats – the Jonathan Moyo kind of character; but of course being of much less intellectual finesse compared to Jonathan who himself (Moyo) is by general standards is also intellectually half-baked. That we know for sure about Jealous Mawarire.