Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

Zimbabwe president pledges economic revival as election campaign kicks off

NYASHA CHINGONO

ZIMBABWEAN President Emmerson Mnangagwa vowed to do “what we can to remain in power”, promising to revive an economy that has collapsed under his watch as he launched his bid for a second five-year term.

Zimbabwe will hold presidential and parliamentary elections on August 23 which are expected to pit Mnangagwa, 80, of the ZANU-PF party against pastor and lawyer Nelson Chamisa, 45, of the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC).

The election comes amid a raging economic crisis, with high inflation and a currency that plunged more than 50% this month against the U.S. dollar.

Advertisements

In remarks aimed mostly at his rural support base at the weekend, Mnangagwa pledged infrastructure developments.

“ZANU-PF is unstoppable. It will continue governing Zimbabwe as other parties continue to split asunder,” he told a large crowd of supporters in Chipinge, about 500 km (311 miles) east of the capital Harare.

“We fought for our democracy, no one will stop us.”

Mnangagwa toppled independent Zimbabwe’s first president, Robert Mugabe, in a coup in 2017, ending his 37-year rule.

He was hailed as a pragmatic leader shortly after taking power, but he scored only a narrow win in the 2018 elections over Chamisa, who is still considered the strongest challenger to his re-election bid.

Zimbabwe’s economic crisis tops voters’ concerns, with a 100 Zimdollar (Z$) note – the country’s highest denomination – not enough to buy an egg. About Z$10,000 fetch US$1 on the parallel market.

READ:  Comedian mocks Zimbabwe's government, despite fear of reprisal

The opposition CCC party enjoys considerable support in towns and cities, while ZANU-PF’s supporters are mainly in rural areas.

A bullish Mnangagwa said his government had made strides in infrastructure development, power generation and grown the mining economy from $3 billion in 2018 with hopes to generate $12 billion in revenue by the end of 2023.

“We are building roads and dams and recently we started installing solar boreholes in every village across the country,” he said, speaking mostly in the Shona language.

Mnangagwa is pitted against 10 other presidential aspirants amid criticism that his government is closing the democratic space, following the passing of the so-called Patriotic Bill which opponents say outlaws criticism of the state.

Zimbabwe has endured over two decades of economic failure following land seizures by Mugabe, plunging the southern African country into an economic crisis.

Advertisements

Advertisements
By The African Mirror

MORE FROM THIS SECTION