News / Local
Zanu PF 'rigs' elections Obadiah Musindo
08 May 2017 at 05:03hrs | Views
A pastor with close links to ZANU PF Obadiah Musindo has bragged that the ruling party 'rigs' every election as it "has a bag full of tricks to resoundingly win the 2018 elections".
"Zanu PF is going to win the 2018 elections and we are going to win with a bigger margin" he said in Mutare on Saturday.
"Are you not aware that we have a bag full of tricks to win the elections? We will use different tricks to win the election.
"My workers are heavily campaigning for the party, each worker will bring four to five or 10 people that will vote for Zanu PF," Musindo is quoted saying by NewsDay.
"We are not scared of the proposed coalition. These people know that they are not going to defeat Zanu PF. The likes of Mujuru are just bitter because they were kicked out of the ruling party."
Several opposition parties are currently piling pressure on the Zanu PF government to reform the electoral roadmap to guard against vote-rigging, but Musindo said the efforts would come to nought, as the parties had no programmes to attract voters.
"The opposition parties in the country have no programmes to offer in the country and we are not going to vote for sweets. They failed to deliver when they were in the coalition government," he said.
"Zanu PF is going to win the 2018 elections and we are going to win with a bigger margin" he said in Mutare on Saturday.
"Are you not aware that we have a bag full of tricks to win the elections? We will use different tricks to win the election.
"My workers are heavily campaigning for the party, each worker will bring four to five or 10 people that will vote for Zanu PF," Musindo is quoted saying by NewsDay.
"We are not scared of the proposed coalition. These people know that they are not going to defeat Zanu PF. The likes of Mujuru are just bitter because they were kicked out of the ruling party."
Several opposition parties are currently piling pressure on the Zanu PF government to reform the electoral roadmap to guard against vote-rigging, but Musindo said the efforts would come to nought, as the parties had no programmes to attract voters.
"The opposition parties in the country have no programmes to offer in the country and we are not going to vote for sweets. They failed to deliver when they were in the coalition government," he said.
Source - NewsDay