By Dorrothy Moyo| Panicking over several leaks as well as revelations of failure, Emmerson Mnangagwa’s ZANU PF party has rushed to set up provincial social media teams to defend the party and Government programmes on social media.
The party has accused the opposition of deliberately misconstruing the signing of the Global Compensation Deed (GCD) designed to compensate white former farm owners as a reversal of the land reform programme by Mnangagwa.
Speaking during a Matabeleland North Provincial Co-ordinating Committee (PCC) meeting yesterday, Zanu-PF Politburo member Munyaradzi Machacha, said while many people were spreading misinformation about the country on social media, party members were slackening in defending the party’s programmes.
He said land reform will never be reversed but the Government in signing the GCD was following the dictates of the Constitution.
“We therefore should come up with provincial social media teams to articulate the party and Government policies. While some people would be going to the farms while others work in industries, we should also have a cyber unit which will be involved in defending the party’s programmes on social media platforms. Social media has become the new battlefield for control, but the opposition is using it to portray the country in bad light which is not the situation of the ground,” said Machacha.
“We have facts and statistics of what is happening on the ground. While they send lies on social media our teams should counter that with facts and we expect each province to be doing this.”
He said the Politburo has resolved to set up District Co-ordinating Committees (DCC) in eight provinces as has already been done with Bulawayo and Harare. “Remember we had DCCs in the past but they became more powerful and influential than what they were designed to be. They became more powerful than their superior structures that is why the party resolved to disband them. But we have observed that there is a gap that has been caused by their absence in the districts that is why we are bringing them back,” he said.
“We had cases where the PCC would go and ask for permission from them yet the PCC was superior. When we set up the new structures, we will allow them to fly but we will clip their wings so they will not fly like eagles. They would not assume the same powers as they did previously.”
Speaking at the Bulawayo PCC meeting at Davies Hall in the city yesterday, party Secretary for Administration Dr Obert Mpofu challenged the party’s newly elected Bulawayo provincial executive to play a leading role in mobilising support to ensure that the party resoundingly wins in the 2023 harmonised elections.
He said the interim provincial executive committee should also help instil discipline among members and strengthen structures in preparation for the 2023 harmonised elections.
The province had been without an executive following the dissolution of structures in 2019 and had been operating under the chairmanship of Politburo member Absalom Sikhosana who died in May.
The 15-member Bulawayo provincial leadership, which is led by Obert Msindo comprises elected District Co-ordinating Committees (DCC) members.
Dr Mpofu urged the executive committee to work as a team and shun factionalism in line with the thrust of the new dispensation.
“We are here to build Bulawayo and therefore we should all work together towards achieving that goal.
“Zanu-PF is a mass party and therefore we expect the leadership to work with everyone in the party and mobilise enough support for us to win the next elections, which are due in 2023,” he said.
Dr Mpofu also urged party members to desist from the politics of tribalism, saying Zimbabweans were one people regardless of language and cultural diversity.
“Bulawayo is a cosmopolitan city and don’t discriminate against anyone basing on the language they speak or region they come from,” he said. – State Media/ additional reporting