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Robert Mugabe, Secretary General of ZANU-PF (Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front), arrives in Geneva to attend a conference on Rhodesia. 24th October 1976. Geneva, Switzerland.

#Mugabe #Zimbabwe #Rhodesia #ZANUPF #White #Minority #Rule #Geneva #Switzerland

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On #ThisDayInHistory in 2017, #Zimbabwe's long-time #socialist president #RobertMugabe was deposed in a coup & impeachment. He resigned when it looked like removal was imminent. He led #ZANUPF in a war of independence and then the country since 1980, despite rampant corruption.

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40 years too late!! 🙄🙄
Another #ZanuPF fail!!

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45 years after independence, #ZanuPf still cannot manage Zimbabwe? Embarrassing!!
🙄🙄

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Zimbabwe's ruling party resolves to extend President's term to 2030 - Sight Magazine Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF party plans to amend the constitution to extend President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s term by two years to 2030.

Zimbabwe’s ruling party resolves to extend President’s term to 2030 @sightmagazine.bsky.social #Zimbabwe #ZANUPF #EmmersonMnangagwa

sightmagazine.com.au/news/zimbabw...

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ZANU-PF succession fight goes public as schisms deepen Vice-President Chiwenga accuses President Mnangagwa’s allies of looting US$3.2 billion from party coffers and demands arrests

President #Mnangagwa promised an internal probe but pointedly snubbed VP #Chiwenga at the Central Committee. Behind the scenes, he’s reportedly plotting revenge – reshaping the narrative and rallying allies ahead of the #ZANUPF Conference (13-18 Oct).

africa-conf.com/zanu-pf-succ...

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ZANU-PF succession fight goes public as schisms deepen Vice-President Chiwenga accuses President Mnangagwa’s allies of looting US$3.2 billion from party coffers and demands arrests

#Zimbabwe’s Vice-President #Chiwenga has dropped a political bombshell – accusing President Mnangagwa’s allies of looting US$3.2 billion from #ZANUPF coffers. His dossier names four top figures and demands arrests.

africa-conf.com/zanu-pf-succ...

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This is nuts! Is #Zimbabwe now going to become a dumping ground for #Russia's nuclear waste!!
#ZANUPF always makes the worst decisions for the nation!! 😱😱🙄🙄😔😔☢️

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Zanu-PF Denounces Operation Dudula’s Healthcare Blockade Zimbabwe's ruling Zanu-PF party, led by Farai Marapira, has denounced Operation Dudula's blockade of healthcare for immigrants, labeling it a colonial tactic that undermines African unity. The conflict has ignited debates on social media, highlighting divisions in public opinion about immigration and solidarity in Africa amid ongoing humanitarian challenges.

🚨 Zimbabwe’s Zanu-PF condemns Operation Dudula’s healthcare blockade for immigrants, calling it a colonial-era continuation. Public reactions are heating up online.

#Zimbabwe #ZanuPF #OperationDudula #HealthcareRights #Immigration

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Zim on the brink: Analysts warn of political implosion and economic collapse | The Citizen With Mnangagwa accused of clinging to power and the opposition in tatters, Zimbabwe's future looks increasingly bleak.

When polticians seek power for power's sake (and money) this is the result.
#zimbabwe used to be considered the bread basket of zimbabwe with 96% literacy rates. Shameful from #zanupf and #mnangagwa

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No title, no utilities, no problem:Inside Zanu-PF’s land-for-votes scheme A Political party card, not cash, got Alice Nasiyaya her first plot of land. In 2014, her brother-in-law tipped her off about a group that was distributing residential land in Harare, but their methods weren’t by the book. All Nasiyaya had to do was prove she was a member of Zanu-PF, Zimbabwe’s ruling party. She showed her membership card, got the land and built a house. She claims that the people who originally allocated her land presented themselves as local Zanu-PF representatives, and she believed them. But that land, she learned later, was reserved by the city of Harare to be used for an airport expansion. And three years later, Harare City Council bulldozers came and levelled the house. The Zanu-PF representatives went around on the day of demolition, collecting information about everyone who stayed in the area, and promising to relocate them to another place that was set aside for party loyalists like them. A year after, she says, those same Zanu-PF representatives found her another piece of land. There, she built another house, where she still lives. Many others in her neighbourhood have acquired land this way, she says. In Zimbabwe, the ruling party has long used land promises as a tool for securing votes, creating a patronage system that trades land for political loyalty. While not new, the trend has become so widespread in informal neighbourhoods like the one Nasiyaya lives in that it has spawned its own vocabulary: emusangano, a Shona word meaning “land from the party.” But there’s a flip side to these land giveaways: None of the people given properties have titles to the land where they’ve made their homes. The state has mastered the art of keeping people stuck, dangling the promise of title deeds every election year without delivering, says Reuben Akili, director of Combined Harare Residents Association. “People have got that hope, and they will keep on voting,” Akili says. Locals know that disloyalty could cost them the land. They could easily be kicked out, he says. REFORMS TO GIVEAWAYS This patronage network is a spillover from past land policies. Former president Robert Mugabe issued sweeping and controversial land reforms in 2000, converting 6 000 large, white-owned farms into close to 170 000 black-owned farms, according to Human Rights Watch. But this was more than just land reform: Local people call this period the Third Chimurenga, or the third liberation struggle against colonial rule. Much of the valuable peri-urban land on Harare’s outskirts became state land, which Zanu-PF used as a political tool to gift well-connected party members, according to a national audit from 2003. Part of the strategy was to build Zanu-PF voting blocs in the urban areas, where it was losing support. Instead of democratising ownership of farmland and boosting crop production, the land reform became a vehicle for speculators to buy up cheap, newly available state land and resell it at a premium without accounting for the proceeds. At the same time, the ministry of local government allocated some of that land to housing cooperatives, trusts and self-proclaimed “authorities” of state land, all on the basis of their connections to the ruling Zanu-PF party. Since then, the process of land allocation has remained disorganised and unregulated. Party officials deny illegally allocating land to supporters. Farai Muroiwa Marapira, director for information and publicity for Zanu-PF, calls the accusations false and unfounded. “The president has been clear that he is a president for all Zimbabweans. Therefore, if land is to be distributed, it is done on non-partisan lines,” he says. Harare’s city council – which monitors land allocation and housing in the city – has tried to intervene. Authorities in November 2024 vowed to demolish more than 5 000 homes, some of them built on land allocated to people based on their political affiliation. But this is not the first crackdown, and previous crackdowns haven’t stopped the spread. MUSHROOMING INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS This land allocation exacerbates the challenge of regulating infrastructure in informally-created neighbourhoods. Homes are erected so haphazardly that some are built in the middle of roads, or directly on the banks of the Hunyani River. About a third of Harare’s residents live in informal settlements, according to a 2024 report by African Cities Research Consortium. The process of buying state-owned land technically falls under the jurisdiction of local government councils. The government can give land to local authorities, who are authorised to sell it. But going through that formal channel is an onerous, slow and prohibitively expensive process. Some people have been on the waiting list to buy land through the local council for years or even decades. Plus, says Stanley Gama, the council’s corporate communications manager, the city has run out of land to sell. Even in cases when Zanu-PF land barons ask for money for land, it’s cheaper than going through formal channels, says Nigel, who requested that just his middle name be used, for fear of retaliation. He has three pieces of land, which he says he bought cheaply because of his affiliation to the ruling party – but he doesn’t have titles to any of them. He says he paid under US$1 000 (about N$19 400) for what would typically cost between US$6 000 and US$9 000 (between N$117 000 and N$175 000). Even if he loses the land, he says, he’s saved money on what he would otherwise have paid in rent. “If you attend youth meetings, you get the land free; but if you don’t attend often, that’s when you pay a small fee,” he says. Marapira, the Zanu-PF official, says the police can arrest people who sell land this way. This will not work, says Akili. “It is very rare to see them getting arrested, prosecuted and jailed,” he says. “They are always linked to powerful people.” – Global Press Journal The post No title, no utilities, no problem:Inside Zanu-PF’s land-for-votes scheme appeared first on The Namibian.

#ZanuPF #ZimbabwePolitics #LandForVotes #Harare #PoliticalCorruption

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Mnangagwa dangles landas MP loyalty ‘bait’ Zimbabwean president Emmerson Mnangagwa’s bid to extend his rule to 2030 has taken a dramatic turn. This comes after revelations that both Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF) and Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) members of parliament (MPs) have been allocated residential stands by the government – raising serious allegations of bribery and political coercion. According to a press statement issued by the Zimbabwean ministry of local government and public works on 9 April, at least 70 residential stands were disbursed across three key locations: Killarney in Goromonzi (15), Penrose in Zvimba (15), and Mabelreign in Harare (40). The ministry insists the move is a continuation of a non-monetary benefit programme dating back to the eighth parliament, meant to ‘empower’ MPs and lessen accommodation burdens. “The ministry of local government and public works in 2013 partnered with the parliament of Zimbabwe to make residential stands available . . . This facility is a once-off entitlement … part of their conditions of service,” the ministry said. However, the timing of the allocations – just weeks before a planned vote on a controversial constitutional amendment that would allow Mnangagwa to run for a third term beyond 2028 – has triggered widespread suspicion that the stands are being used to buy votes. Inside sources within Zanu-PF told Daily News that internal resistance to Mnangagwa’s succession plans remains strong, with some senior MPs wary of violating the constitutional two-term limit. “They are trying to silence dissent through perks and perks alone,” says a senior Zanu-PF legislator, who declined to be named. “The party is deeply divided, and this latest move could backfire.” The CCC has yet to issue an official statement, but a party insider described the allocations as “a clear act of inducement” that compromises parliamentary independence. The opposition has consistently opposed Mnangagwa’s alleged push for lifetime leadership, warning that such manoeuvres undermine democracy. The government maintains there is “nothing untoward” about the allocations. Yet the optics suggest a calculated move to win loyalty in the parliament. “Implementation of programmes aimed at providing housing to targeted communities is being done in fulfilment of provisions contained in the constitution of Zimbabwe,” the local government ministry added, attempting to distance the allocations from political motivations. To date, the parliament has received over 263 stands, including 188 at Goromonzi, 49 in Bulawayo, 12 at Chiredzi, nine at Kadoma, and five at Beitbridge. While the initiative is not new, analysts say the sudden acceleration of stand allocations at such a politically sensitive time cannot be ignored. Zimbabwe’s political temperature is rising as the ruling party weighs its next move. With the parliament expected to sit later this month to debate the amendment, the focus will be on whether the ‘empowered’ MPs will toe the line or resist. The post Mnangagwa dangles landas MP loyalty ‘bait’ appeared first on The Namibian.

#Zimbabwe #Mnangagwa #ZanuPF #CCC #PoliticalCoercion

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Blessed Geza's movement tried but believe after much reflection we can see that days leading to March 31 revealed to us the conspirators who pretend to be on the side of Freedom, as well as how scared the Government is to even the idea of protests or movements #ZanuPf, #InternationalOrphan😞

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Zimbabwe court denies bail to antigovernment protesters A Zimbabweans court on Thursday denied bail for nearly 100 people arrested 10 days ago for allegedly protesting against the rule of president Emmerson Mnangagwa. Police rounded up the 95 men and women on 31 March at a small protest in central Harare mobilised by a veteran of the ruling ZANU-PF party who has called for the president to leave office. They were charged with breaching the peace and participating in gatherings with intent to promote public violence, offences that carry sentence of up to five years in jail. Magistrate Isheunesu Matova said he denied bail on the grounds of public safety as the release of the 95 “will likely cause commotion” and allow them to regroup. Those in jail were aged between 20 and 63 and none were employed, according to the police charge sheet. Three other people arrested the same day were already on trial on similar charges. The day of protests was called by Blessed Geza, a veteran of the war that led to independence in 1980 from white-minority rule, who claims that Mnangagwa is manoeuvring to stay in power after his term ends in 2028. Only dozens of demonstrators gathered – with 200 in the capital, according to police – but many businesses and offices shut for the day in several cities. Mnangagwa, who took power from long-time ruler Robert Mugabe in a 2017 coup, is accused of creeping authoritarianism that has crushed the political opposition, including through long jail terms. Journalist Blessed Mhlanga has been in jail since 24 February on charges related to his interviews with Geza. The post Zimbabwe court denies bail to antigovernment protesters appeared first on The Namibian.

#Zimbabwe #Protesters #HumanRights #Mnangagwa #ZANUPF

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Zimbabwe police deploy to block demonstrations against Mnangagwa - Sight Magazine Police deployed heavily in Zimbabwe's capital and other cities on Monday, largely neutralising a call by veterans for massive protests.

Zimbabwe police deploy to block demonstrations against Mnangagwa @sightmagazine.bsky.social #EmmersonMnangagwa #Zimbabwe #Zimbabweanveterans #BlessedGeza #ZANUPF

sightmagazine.com.au/news/zimbabw...

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#history #Mugabe #Zimbabwe #ZanuPF #IMF #Thatcher #Britain #Tories #Stalin #USSR #SovietUnion #China #PRC #Mao #Kurds #Kurdistan #revolt #Turkey #SheikSaid #Piran #Darahini #CivataAzadiyaKurd

www.wsws.org/en/articles/...

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Zimbabwe bans large gatherings as threat of cholera outbreak grows Cases are rising in many parts of the country and critics are blaming chronic water shortages and poor sanitation systems

#Zimbabwe - The blame for this lies purely at the feet of #ZanuPF. Over 40 years after independence, even under some sanctions, there is no excuse for this.

www.theguardian.com/global-devel...

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