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Zanu PF to mark members' houses with stickers
Tatenda Chitagu & Nunurai Jena, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
November
18, 2012
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2012/11/18/zanu-pf-to-mark-members-houses-with-stickers/
Zanu PF says
it will mark its members' houses with stickers during the
coming elections, as was done during the last census, for easy identification
of its supporters.
Addressing a
Zanu PF inter-district meeting held at Masvingo Teachers'
College last week, Masvingo provincial party chairman, Lovemore
Matuke said it was mandatory for every supporter to have the sticker
for "easy identification".
"You are
supposed to have stickers at every household so that we identify
you," said Matuke. "Our real supporters should have
them wedged at their places. If you do not have that sticker at
your place, you will be skipped," he said.
Sources said
those with stickers on their doors would get freebies from Zanu
PF as the party dishes out goodies in return for votes ahead of
next year's elections.
The party has
in the past used food and agricultural inputs to lure voters.
But there are
also fears that the stickers would be used to identify people who
do not support Zanu PF, who would then be victimised during the
elections.
It could not
be established if the stickers would be put at every Zanu PF supporter's
house countrywide.
This identification
system brings back the sad memories of the run-up to the June 27
2008 Presidential run-off elections, where scores of people were
murdered,
tortured while others were displaced by Zanu PF militia.
The MDC-T has
said at least 500 of its supporters were murdered during the 2008
elections.
Meanwhile, Zanu
PF youths in Mashonaland West province have resolved to demand a
quota of seats allocated in the coming elections, saying they had
been sidelined for a long time.
This was one
of the resolutions they came up with at a provincial youth conference
last week in Kadoma.
The youths accused
the party's leadership of trying to side-line them by putting
a regulation that bars members with less than five consecutive years
in the party from contesting Primary elections.
Zanu PF's
national youth political commissariat, Mike Gava said there were
no sacred cows this time around as the youth would contest any constituency
as long as they had the capacity.
"The youth
are going to challenge in every constituency, unlike previously
when the youth were barred from contesting those regarded as seniors
in the party," said Gava.
But Zanu PF
spokesperson Rugare Gumbo said there was nothing wrong with their
youth aspiring for higher offices, as long as they could measure
up to the standard.
"There
is nothing wrong with our youth aspiring to be MPs or councillors,
as long as they are competent and capable of delivering. That is
the reason we as a party are in the process of empowering them,"
said Gumbo.
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