‘Zimbabwe, our time has come,’ says Chamisa ahead of election push to unseat Mnangagwa

Zimbabwe elections are set for Wednesday. Opposition leader Nelson Chamisa faces President Emmerson Mnangagwa. Thousands gathered for an opposition party rally. More than 10 000 people, many clad in bright yellow, gathered on Monday for a climactic show of support for Zimbabwean opposition leader Nelson Chamisa ahead of tense general elections. The southern African country

  • Zimbabwe elections are set for Wednesday.
  • Opposition leader Nelson Chamisa faces President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
  • Thousands gathered for an opposition party rally.

More than 10 000 people, many clad in bright yellow, gathered on Monday for a climactic show of support for Zimbabwean opposition leader Nelson Chamisa ahead of tense general elections.

The southern African country goes to the polls on Wednesday for presidential and legislative elections, with Chamisa, 45, vying to defeat hardline 80-year-old head of state Emmerson Mnangagwa.

The vote, taking place against a backdrop of discontent at Zimbabwe’s economic crisis, is being closely watched as a barometer of popularity for the ZANU-PF party, in power since independence 43 years ago.

Supporters of Chamisa’s Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) gathered on a parched plot of land in central Harare from where the ZANU-PF’s towering headquarters are visible.

“Zimbabwe, our time has come. This is the time!” Chamisa told the crowd from a podium.

He added:

We are going to win with a big and wide margin. Let’s just prepare for our inauguration.

The rally was the finale to a bruising campaign in which dozens of Chamisa’s campaign meetings were banned and some of his supporters assaulted by suspected ZANU activists.

Despite over 100 meetings being blocked, said Chamisa, who is also a Pentecostal preacher: “God has said this is my time to be the president.”

CCC supporters chanted in Shona, “ZANU-PF rule will end, vote for Chamisa, poverty will end, Chamisa get into office and end corruption… bring suffering to an end.”

The CCC is popular in Harare and other cities, particularly among young people who account for the lion’s share of the electorate, whereas ZANU-PF is stronger in rural areas.

“We have been under the same government for 43 years and there is no change,” said David, a 25-year-old sociology graduate from Harare.

Zimbabwe's President Emmerson Mnangagwa and main o

Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa and main opposition party leader Nelson Chamisa (R) of the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) are the leading candidates in Zimbabwe’s presidential race.
AFP Adrian Dennis and Jekesai Njikizana/various source

Opposition leader for the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) Nelson Chamisa addresses his supporters during his final campaign rally in Harare.
Zimbabwe's President Emmerson Mnangagwa and main o

Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa and main opposition party leader Nelson Chamisa (R) of the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) are the leading candidates in Zimbabwe’s presidential race.
AFP Adrian Dennis and Jekesai Njikizana/various source

Opposition leader for the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) Nelson Chamisa addresses his supporters during his final campaign rally in Harare.

He preferred to give only his first name in a country where the opposition regularly complain about intimidation.

“It’s the right time for change and Chamisa is the right guy to deliver what we want as young people,” David told AFP at the rally.

“There is no hope and no light in Zimbabwe as long as we have this ZANU-PF leadership,” said another supporter, a 35-year-old unemployed man who gave his name in Tendai.

He was fully dressed in yellow and clutched a plastic yellow trumpet.

The former British colony, then named Rhodesia, broke away from London in 1965 under white-minority rule.

After a long guerrilla war, it gained independence in 1980 and was renamed Zimbabwe.

But under its first president Robert Mugabe, who was forced out by Mnangagwa in 2017, the fledgling democracy spiralled into authoritarianism and economic decline.

BULAWAYO, ZIMBABWE - AUGUST 20: A man holds a flag

A Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) rally in Bulawayo on 20 August 2023.
Getty Images Mkhululi Thobela/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Supporters of the opposition leader for the Citize

Supporters of the opposition leader for the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) Nelson Chamisa hold up banners with ‘President Chamisa’ on written on them during their final campaign rally in Harare.
AFP John Wessels/AFP
BULAWAYO, ZIMBABWE - AUGUST 20: A man holds a flag

A Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) rally in Bulawayo on 20 August 2023.
Getty Images Mkhululi Thobela/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Supporters of the opposition leader for the Citize

Supporters of the opposition leader for the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) Nelson Chamisa hold up banners with ‘President Chamisa’ on written on them during their final campaign rally in Harare.
AFP John Wessels/AFP

Almost two-thirds of Zimbabweans are under 25, according to UN figures.

But despite their country’s mineral riches and agricultural wealth, many of them struggle to find stable jobs.

The economy is mired in hyperinflation and what the World Bank describes as “unsustainable” debt levels.

Inflation reached 175.8% in June, and in July slowed to 101%, according to official figures, although some economists estimate it to be much higher.

Basic foodstuffs are unaffordable for some and there are shortages of medicines in public hospitals – a problem widely blamed on misspending and graft.

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