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Masvingo traditional leaders propping up Jabulani Sibanda terror
campaign
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
January 28, 2011
'Recognizing
and acknowledging that traditional leaders are community leaders
with equal responsibilities and obligation to all members of their
communities regardless of age, gender ethnicity , race religion
and political affiliation, the Parties hereby agree to;
- Commit themselves
to ensuring the political neutrality of traditional leaders; and
- Call upon
traditional leaders not to engage in partisan political activities
at a national level as well as in their communities'
Article
14 of the GPA
Despite provisions
contained in the Global
Political Agreement under Article 14 imploring political parties
to call upon traditional leaders not to engage in partisan political
activities, traditional leaders in Masvingo province have been accused
of propping up Jabulani Sibanda's terror campaign in the province.
Traditional leaders are allegedly ordering villagers to attend the
meetings on behalf of the self proclaimed war veteran leader and
apparent ZANU PF commissar who launched the onslaught on Masvingo
province in 2010.
According to Gutu south Member of Parliament
and Public Service Minister, Professor Eliphas Mukonoweshuro, the
villager are coerced to attend the meetings by traditional leaders
and threatened with fines of between USD5 and USD50 if they fail.
At the meetings, villagers are told to vote for ZANU PF or risk
death. At one of the meetings held in Gutu district, Sibanda was
quoted as saying, "We will kill the Member of Parliament.
People will die and we will kill everyone who will note vote for
ZANU PF in the next elections". Those who have attended the
meetings before quoted Sibanda as saying that they (ZANU PF) are
the ones who liberated the country and will go back and fight if
people vote for any party other than ZANU PF. In his speeches Sibanda
allegedly equates ZANU PF to a wife that a man guards jealously
and equates people with the walls of a building that have gone desolate
and need repainting.
Observers noted
that people usually look terrified after the meetings as they dread
a repeat of the June 2008 electoral
violence. Worse still, those who attend the meetings believe
that they have no protection from the law and as such have nowhere
to run.
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in Zimbabwe fact
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