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Prime Minister to congress
Morgan Tsvangirai, MDC
April 29, 2011
Members of the
National Standing Committee
Members of the National Executive and Council
Representatives of the Trade Unions and Civil Society
Members of the Diplomatic Corp,
Invited Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Comrades and Friends,
It is with great pleasure
that I stand before you today at this historic Congress.
This is our
Party's final congress before the next watershed elections.
Those elections will represent the culmination of the hard work,
sacrifice and dedication to democracy exhibited by millions of Zimbabweans
over the past 11 years.
For, the MDC will win
the next elections, we will form the next Government and we will
take Zimbabwe into a new era of peace, prosperity, dignity and hope.
We will achieve this
because we are together, united winning and ready for real change.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Comrades and Friends, everyone one of us gathered here today carries
the scars from the struggle that begun with the formation of the
MDC in 1999.
Each of us have felt
the weight of the oppressor's baton or the feel of his fist
or booted feet. We carry the emotional scars from grieving for our
fallen comrades and the trauma of seeing the sacrifices of our liberation
heroes desecrated on the altar of political plunder and exploitation.
Since our last congress
we have lost leaders and we have lost warriors for peace and democracy.
Let us remember those men, women and youths who have paid the ultimate
price to deliver real change to the people of Zimbabwe.
Our founding
Vice President and a dear colleague in the struggle, Gibson Sibanda,
is no
more. Our founding national chairman, Isaac Matongo died a year
after our historic Congress of 2006 and I would like to thank all
of you for the support you gave me and family during our most trying
moment following the death
of my beloved wife, Susan, on 6 March 2009.
I also wish
to thank fellow Standing Committee members with whom I have led
this party for the past five years. We did our best and led this
party to victory in March
2008. We confounded our critics and we have become the largest
political party in the country in the last five years.
At this historic congress
let us honour their sacrifice. Let us treasure their memory and
let us ensure that their legacy is a New Zimbabwe that is truly
free, democratic and prosperous.
This is what they stood
for and this is what they were fighting for. We owe it to them to
carry on the struggle courageously, peacefully and relentlessly.
In light of
this, I wish to repeat what I said at the Women's
Congress and the Youth Congress by addressing the allegations
of factionalism, conflict and corruption that have preceded this
Congress.
We are aware that Zanu
PF is a stakeholder in this Congress. They want a certain outcome
but we have survived infiltration before and we will overcome forever.
But let me once again
state that there will be no tolerance of violence in the MDC. There
will be no sanctioning of corruption in the MDC;
And there will be no
reward for patronage in the MDC.
It is these traits that
our party was born to eradicate. It is these traits that condemned
an entire generation to poverty and repression and there can be
no room for them in the New Zimbabwe.
The MDC I am proud to
lead has got character and culture. It is a pro-poor, people-centred
social democratic, non-racial and non-sexist movement.
It is inclusive, tolerant
and against any forms of discrimination, it supports the emancipation
of women and considers democracy as a core value. It is against
all forms of factionalism, fronticism, rumour mongering, slander
and character assassination.
This is the character
that has made our brand such an appealing one in the last decade.
It is the brand that will define our elections tomorrow and the
national elections whenever they are held.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Comrades and Friends, it has been a long five years since our last
congress.
That Congress was held
in the aftermath of a vicious and bitter split that we deeply regret.
However we soldiered on and rebuilt this party.
Through the most vicious
of all forms of violence and the most aggravated form of dictatorship
on the African continent at the moment, we survived and won an election.
From those sad ruins
of the party at its Congress in 2006, I stand here before you not
only as President of a proud movement but also as Prime Minister
of the Republic of Zimbabwe.
I stand here
as leader of a ruling party with majority seats in Parliament
and with a Speaker
of the House of Assembly.
A party that has mayors
in all the urban areas and controls the majority of local authorities
throughout the country.
A party that has had
a positive impact in this transitional arrangement and has given
every Zimbabwean the reason to hope once again.
It is at this Congress
that we must develop the roadmap to take this party and our nation
forward, to complete the change that our people demand and deserve.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Comrades and Friends, although we have much to be proud of, we must
also acknowledge that there is much we must learn from the last
five years and much work still to do.
Our time in Government
has shown us that securing real transfer of power will be no easy
task. Any failure on our part to adhere to our principles, to drive
forward our peaceful, democratic revolution will be seized upon
by the enemies of progress in an attempt to reverse the gains our
nation has made.
We must remain vigilant
as these enemies attempt to distract us with ill-gotten trinkets,
false promises of empowerment and continued threats of violence.
It is lack of respect
for our national security institutions that has led to this sad
state of affairs; the police, the army and the intelligence service
must be empowered to act professionally, impartially and abide by
the Constitution of Zimbabwe.
This will be achieved
under our new Government.
National institutions
serve the people and not certain political parties and once the
people lose confidence in the security sector, the onus befalls
on those institutions to prove that they are worthy of the people's
trust.
We must stay true to
our principles of ensuring that our nation's riches enrich
the many and not the few. That we are the masters of our own destiny
and do not allow Zimbabwe to be recolonised by any nation, whether
it hails from the West, the East, North or South.
This Congress must set
the tone for the next lap of the people's struggle. We have
fought a good fight but we need to complete this journey for the
benefit of all Zimbabweans.
We are heartened by the
brave stance of our colleagues in the region and by the facilitator,
President Jacob Zuma.
The region has given
us reason to believe that SADC and the AU are ready to prevent the
circus of 2008 that began in Kenya, was perfected in Zimbabwe but
backfired with disastrous consequences in the Ivory Coast.
This is the circus where
losers of national elections are accommodated through power sharing
arrangements.
We applaud the position
of SADC in ensuring that the process towards a free and fair election
in Zimbabwe is fully supported, enhanced and consolidated.
The AU and SADC,
as the guarantors to the GPA,
have shown that they are ready to nurse this process and to ensure
that a credible government is put in place through a free and fair
election.
Thus, the next months
are going to be critical in ensuring that we put in place the necessary
mechanisms and building blocks to guarantee and protect the people's
vote and the people's will.
We are in the last mile
of our democratic struggle to create a New Zimbabwe but we all know
that the last kicks of a dying horse are vicious.
Let us therefore work together in unity of purpose guarding against
violence and coordinated attacks by those who have been rejected
by the people.
We face in the next phase
of our development as a nation not only a political transition but
also a generational transition. The liberation generation has taken
this country over the past 30 years from a vibrant economy to its
knees where the currency was worthless, savings wiped out and general
sustenance became a daily struggle for survival.
It is our responsibility
as a new generation taking this country forward for the next 30
years to move this country from a Third world country to First world
status. Yes, it can be done with the human and natural endowments
that we possess. With political stability and confidence of our
people in a credible and legitimate government, it is possible to
lay the foundation for a New Zimbabwe.
The outcome
of this congress must deal therefore with the transformation that
is necessary in our party and in our nation.
We must have a clear five year programme as a party that will deal
with massive unemployment and poverty that we currently face, a
clear programme underpinned by political reforms, a commitment to
the rule of law, defense of property rights and reward of individual
effort.
This programme must set
out clear economic plans, focus on infrastructure rehabilitation,
resuscitation of our manufacturing potential and increasing our
mining and agricultural productivity.
This New Zimbabwe beckons
to every citizen.
I can see that new Zimbabwe.
A new Zimbabwe where
the people will be accorded the dignity and respect that they deserve.
A Zimbabwe where people
are free to choose; where the nation is living in harmony despite
political, religious, tribal or racial diversity.
A new Zimbabwe with functioning
hospitals and well equipped schools.
Under this new programme,
we envision a US$100 billion economy by 2030. Under that MDC government,
we expect to achieve 10 percent annual growth rate in a peaceful
country underpinned by constitutionalism and the rule of law.
A Zimbabwe where very
Zimbabwean has confidence in our national institutions and where
people's rights are increased and not minimized.
What is happening in
North Africa is a continued manifestation of the violation of the
people's fundamental rights. We do not want that to happen
here in Zimbabwe.
We believe that dialogue
and conversation amongst ourselves will solve our problems.
A Zimbabwe where the
government delivers affordable and quality services to the people;
where the people's rights and basic freedoms of assembly,
movement and speech are not negotiable.
Comrades and Friends,
join hands with me as we ask the Almighty God to anoint this process
that will lead to a return of peace, progress and prosperity to
this great country.
From this Congress, we
must all be prepared to give our all in this last mile, with hope
and pride that we are finishing the struggle that many Zimbabweans
died for.
We will not fail the
people of Zimbabwe.
Let us retain our hope
and faith.
I thank you.
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