News / Local
'Don't use condoms,' Mudede urges Zimbabweans
27 May 2014 at 06:39hrs | Views
Registrar-General Tobaiwa Mudede has urged Zimbabweans to stop using contraceptives religiously, saying the contraceptives are a ploy by powerful nations to retard population growth in Africa thereby weakening the nations.
Mudede said contraceptives were also conduits for diseases such as cancer, especially in women.
He said this in a Sunday address to Family of God Church congregants commemorating Africa Day in Kambuzuma, Harare.
Present were senior government and Zanu-PF officials who included ruling party national political commissar Cde Webster Shamu, who was guest of honour.
Church founder Reverend Andrew Wutawunashe had invited Mudede and the other VIPs.
Mudede said he had co-authored a book on population control with television producer Richard Hondo.
He said the book explained why people should desist from using contraceptives and urged Africans to sire as many children as possible.
Mudede conceded that his ideas would face stiff resistance.
"When I looked at other countries that are smaller in size than us they actually have bigger populations," said Mudede. "I am pained when I am told that my little daughter must go on contraceptives. Why do you want these foreign products? It pains me a lot.
"Where are you going to get soldiers should there be an aggression? We want police officers, workers, nurses. If you are to ask young people today how many children they have you would hear them responding proudly, ‘just two'."
Mudede said the book came after extensive research, including among the Doma people of Kanyemba, the San of Plumtree and various apostolic sects.
The Doma, San and some apostolic sects, particularly Johane Marange, do not use contraceptives.
Mudede questioned how society could thrive when it was limiting its growth.
"You want to be a super power, but you do not want to multiply," he said.
Mudede said some cancers were a side-effect of contraceptives.
He said Nigeria had a population of more than 130 million and its economy was booming while countries like Zimbabwe, which are preoccupied with contraceptives, have subdued economies.
Mudede said most birth control methods were as bad as genetically modified organisms.
"Pasi nedepo provera. Pasi nenorplant (Down with depo provera, Down with norplant)," he said.
Mudede said he recently lost a niece to cancer associated with a contraceptive.
He added that contraceptives interfered with God's biological plan for women in which their bodies cleanse themselves every month.
"So you want an injection or a tablet to interfere with that natural process created by God?"
Contraceptives were popularised in the country from the 1980s, with donors and government discouraging people from having large families.
Bearing a child each year was viewed as bad practice, with a sustained campaign being run to ridicule those in the practice.
Mudede said contraceptives were also conduits for diseases such as cancer, especially in women.
He said this in a Sunday address to Family of God Church congregants commemorating Africa Day in Kambuzuma, Harare.
Present were senior government and Zanu-PF officials who included ruling party national political commissar Cde Webster Shamu, who was guest of honour.
Church founder Reverend Andrew Wutawunashe had invited Mudede and the other VIPs.
Mudede said he had co-authored a book on population control with television producer Richard Hondo.
He said the book explained why people should desist from using contraceptives and urged Africans to sire as many children as possible.
Mudede conceded that his ideas would face stiff resistance.
"When I looked at other countries that are smaller in size than us they actually have bigger populations," said Mudede. "I am pained when I am told that my little daughter must go on contraceptives. Why do you want these foreign products? It pains me a lot.
"Where are you going to get soldiers should there be an aggression? We want police officers, workers, nurses. If you are to ask young people today how many children they have you would hear them responding proudly, ‘just two'."
Mudede said the book came after extensive research, including among the Doma people of Kanyemba, the San of Plumtree and various apostolic sects.
Mudede questioned how society could thrive when it was limiting its growth.
"You want to be a super power, but you do not want to multiply," he said.
Mudede said some cancers were a side-effect of contraceptives.
He said Nigeria had a population of more than 130 million and its economy was booming while countries like Zimbabwe, which are preoccupied with contraceptives, have subdued economies.
Mudede said most birth control methods were as bad as genetically modified organisms.
"Pasi nedepo provera. Pasi nenorplant (Down with depo provera, Down with norplant)," he said.
Mudede said he recently lost a niece to cancer associated with a contraceptive.
He added that contraceptives interfered with God's biological plan for women in which their bodies cleanse themselves every month.
"So you want an injection or a tablet to interfere with that natural process created by God?"
Contraceptives were popularised in the country from the 1980s, with donors and government discouraging people from having large families.
Bearing a child each year was viewed as bad practice, with a sustained campaign being run to ridicule those in the practice.
Source - chronicle