By Ish Mafundikwa | Al Jazeera |
On January 25, exactly two years and three days after Zimbabwe’s main opposition party the Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) was launched, its leader Nelson Chamisa quit, leaving the party in turmoil.
In a 13-page statement, the 46-year-old lawyer and clergyman listed a litany of reasons why he was taking the extraordinary step of abandoning the party he and others formed in 2022. His main gripe was what he called “infiltration” by the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF).
The opposition leader, who is expected to form a new party sometime soon, said he would not “swim in a river with hungry crocodiles”, in reference to CCC members he accuses of being sellouts working for the ruling party.
But Harare-based analyst Alexander Rusero says Chamisa bailed because he had lost control of the party.
“You don’t run away from a movement that you are leading because of infiltration; if you are in control, you purge the infiltrators,” Rusero told Al Jazeera. He added that infiltration is par for the course for political parties, and Chamisa needs to learn to live with it if he wants to continue in politics.
In December 2021, Setfree Mafukidze, his wife and four children moved to Somerset in the United Kingdom, joining a long list of health workers who have fled Zimbabwe to escape economic and political turmoil.
The United States military says its forces launched strikes on 14 Houthi missiles “that were loaded to be fired” from Yemen in the fourth day of direct attacks on the Iran-aligned group in less than a week.
United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said the civilian death toll in Gaza is “far too high”, especially among children, and called for aid to reach the besieged strip more effectively.
Salem Bazoum, the son of Niger President Mohamed Bazoum who was toppled in a coup last year, was provisionally released on Monday, according to a statement by the Niamey military tribunal.
CHINHOYI - The Zimbabwe National Students Union (ZINASU) has raised the alarm after Dylan Cole, a Chinhoyi University student leader, was allegedly abducted from a lecture theatre.
HARARE — Zimbabwean tycoon Simon Rudland has given the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) a 48-hour ultimatum to withdraw explosive claims that he bankrolled a plot to destabilise the government.
While I am BUSY enjoying life and feeling deeply LOVED by my ONE AND ONLY WIFE, celebrating our FIRST YEAR ANNIVERSARY in Switzerland, Milan and LONDON my attention has been drawn to some BIZARRE and profoundly OUTRAGEOUS videos circulating on social media.