Mutasa: MDC behaving like little babies

didymus_mutasaDidymus Mutasa, the Minister of State for Presidential Affairs has said Zanu (PF) is not taking any notice of the MDC boycott, and that the MDC was behaving like little babies. (Pictured: Didymus Mutasa)


Mutasa, speaking on the Hot Seat programme last Friday about his partys position on the political deadlock threatening to tear apart the fragile coalition, said the MDC boycott will not take the party far or achieve anything.

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai more than a week ago announced his partys decision to disengage from Zanu (PF), because they were dishonest, unreliable and unrepentant and that they will continue with their boycott until there are fundamental reforms.

The MDC leadership, led by Secretary General Tendai Biti, met with representatives of civil society at Harvest House last Friday, to brief them on the partys decision to disengage from Zanu (PF).

Biti said the party was left with no choice because of the resurgence of violence in areas like Chiweshe, Makoni South and Bindura; inertia in constitutional and media reforms and in security sector reform, which has resulted in the National Security Council meeting only once for introductions; lack of movement in the swearing-in of provincial governors and the MDC Deputy Minister of Agriculture.

Furthermore the MDC said it was concerned with the persecution, through prosecution, of MDC MPs and other party functionaries, and the appointment of the Attorney General and Reserve Bank Governor.

A statement by the MDC said: Hon Biti said the hate speech in the public media, farm invasions, the militarisation of the countryside and the lack of respect for the MDC as an equal partner, had poisoned the political relationship with Zanu (PF).

But Minister Mutasa said the MDC boycott will not achieve anything and as far as his party was concerned, the only important outstanding issue is the question of the targeted sanctions, not the issue of Roy Bennetts swearing in.

An angry Mutasa also said Robert Mugabe had every right and the power to appoint the Central Bank Governor Gono and the Attorney General Tomana, and that as far as Mugabe is concerned this issue is a finished accompli (sic) and the President is not going to change his mind.

The Zanu (PF) Minister said: They can go on strike like little babies but Zimbabwe is going to go on without them, and the country is going to go on without them, as in the past.

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