Current:Home > InvestZimbabwe’s opposition boycotts president’s 1st State of the Nation speech since disputed election -ProfitZone
Zimbabwe’s opposition boycotts president’s 1st State of the Nation speech since disputed election
View
Date:2025-04-14 18:46:53
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Zimbabwe’s main opposition party on Tuesday boycotted President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s State of the Nation address following his disputed reelection in August, revealing the widening political cracks in the southern African nation amid allegations of a post-vote clampdown on government critics.
Citizens Coalition for Change spokesperson Promise Mkwananzi said the party’s lawmakers stayed away from the speech because it views Mnangagwa as “illegitimate.”
The CCC accuses Mnangagwa, 81, of fraudulently winning a second term and using violence and intimidation against critics, including by having some elected opposition officials arrested.
The ruling ZANU-PF party, which has been in power in Zimbabwe since the country’s independence from white minority rule in 1980, also retained a majority of Parliament seats in the late August voting. Western and African observers questioned the credibility of the polling, saying an atmosphere of intimidation existed before and during the presidential and parliamentary elections.
Mnangagwa’s address at the $200 million Chinese-built Parliament building in Mt. Hampden, about 18 kilometers (11 miles) west of the capital, Harare, officially opened the new legislative term.
He described the August elections as “credible, free, fair and peaceful” but did not refer to the opposition boycott during his speech, which he used to lay out a legislative agenda that included finalizing a bill that the president’s critics view as an attempt to restrict the work of outspoken non-governmental organizations.
Mnangagwa said Zimbabwe’s troubled economy was “on an upward trajectory” despite “the illegal sanctions imposed on us by our detractors.” He was referring to sanctions imposed by the United States about two decades ago over alleged human rights violations during the leadership of the late former President Robert Mugabe.
The long-ruling autocrat was removed in a 2017 coup and replaced by Mnangagwa, his one-time ally. Mugabe died in 2019.
Mnangagwa said rebounding agricultural production, an improved power supply, a booming mining sector, increased tourist arrivals and infrastructure projects such as roads and boreholes were all signs of growth in Zimbabwe, which experienced one of the world’s worst economic crises and dizzying levels of hyperinflation 15 years ago.
The few remaining formal businesses in the country of 15 million have repeatedly complained about being suffocated by an ongoing currency crisis.
More than two-thirds of the working age population in the once-prosperous country survives on informal activities such as street hawking, according to International Monetary Fund figures. Poor or nonexistent sanitation infrastructure and a scarcity of clean water has resulted in regular cholera outbreaks.
According to the Ministry of Health and Child Care, an outbreak that started in late August had killed 12 people by the end of September in southeastern Zimbabwe. Authorities in Harare said Tuesday that they had recorded five confirmed cases of cholera but no deaths in some of the capital’s poorest suburbs.
___
AP Africa news: https://apnews.com/hub/africa
veryGood! (64231)
Related
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Am I allowed to write a letter of recommendation for a co-worker? Ask HR
- Maryland officials announce $120M for K-12 behavioral health services
- Bears caught on camera raiding Krispy Kreme doughnut van at Alaska military base: They don't even care
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Rescue operation underway off southwestern Greece for around 90 migrants on board yacht
- Rihanna and A$AP Rocky share first photos of their newborn baby, Riot Rose
- A Georgia county’s cold case unit solves the 1972 homicide of a 9-year-old girl
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Danny Masterson’s Wife Bijou Phillips Files for Divorce
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Lawsuit filed over department store worker who died in store bathroom, body not found for days
- Florida man charged with murder in tree-trimming dispute witnessed by 8-year-old
- Challenges to library books continue at record pace in 2023, American Library Association reports
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- California may limit how much company behind Arrowhead bottled water can draw from mountain springs
- A Georgia county’s cold case unit solves the 1972 homicide of a 9-year-old girl
- Bodycam video shows Alabama high school band director being tased, arrested after refusing to end performance
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Savannah Chrisley Addresses Rumor Mom Julie Plans to Divorce Todd From Prison
Hawaii governor calls on people to visit West Maui when it reopens in October: Helping our people heal
Jurors, witnesses in synagogue massacre trial faced threats from this white supremacist
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Am I allowed to write a letter of recommendation for a co-worker? Ask HR
India asks citizens to be careful if traveling to Canada as rift escalates over Sikh leader’s death
Prosecutors set to lay out case against officers in death of unarmed Black man in Denver suburb