Mujuru apologises for stealing future of Zimbabweans

Mujuru apologises for stealing future of Zimbabweans
Published: 19 July 2017
FORMER Vice-President Joice Mujuru, ousted from Zanu-PF three years ago, has again apologised for the 30 years she spent in her former party.

Mujuru, now leader of National People's Party (NPP), said it was time to apologise for stealing the future of Zimbabweans, through rigged elections and corruption.

"The youth are saying to us that jobs disappeared under our watch, some say Mai Mujuru, you erred during your days in Zanu-PF, we should be able to take responsibility and, yes, we erred, but now we are taking a direction for the better," she said.

"But some don't want to take that responsibility that indeed we erred, we stole your quality time, we stole your jobs, we stole your opportunities, maybe to travel this whole world, we stole it because we left you poor we are sorry."

Mujuru also admitted that Zanu-PF stole elections in 2013 and she was embarrassed to have been with the party for all those years when it perpetrated electoral fraud.

"How can I deny that Zanu-PF stole the 2013 general elections with the fraud exposed in Chiwundura by-elections by ERC (Electoral Resource Centre) and Zesn (Zimbabwe Elections Support Network)?

"It has exposed how Zanu-PF stole elections, in just one constituency, there are 2 000 voters, who are dubious, either using the same ID number and different names, multiply that with 210 constituencies, you get 420 000, if they say you won an election with 420 000 votes, you will be a legitimate leader.

"(Sydney) Sekeramayi in Marondera came to Parliament after winning by just 15 votes, I am ashamed to have been part of this fraud."

Admitting for the first time that Israeli firm, Nikuv tinkered with the 2013 voters' roll to give Zanu-PF an upper hand, Mujuru said observers should just withdraw the free and fair tag on Zimbabwean elections.

"Those in Zanu-PF or observers, who once said elections in Zimbabwe are free and fair, must have egg on their faces after the Chiwundura polls. I call on them to just withdraw those words and come out clean to just say 'look we were being fooled all along, the elections in Zimbabwe are not free and fair'," she said.

Mujuru was speaking after signing an electoral alliance with Democratic Assembly for Restoration and Empowerment (Dare) president, Gilbert Dzikiti.
- newsday
Tags: Mujuru,

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