News / National
Dr Munyeza pens another document
20 Jun 2016 at 11:13hrs | Views
Clergyman and businessman, Shingi Munyeza has published another document titled, We are Already in the Turbulence that paints a gloomy picture of the country's economic situation.
Munyeza was recently summoned by the police after publishing a document, urging Zimbabweans to brace for harder times.
In his latest publication, he claims Zimbabwe is already in the midst of economic turbulence.
"A little while ago, I warned of a severe turbulence, we have now entered into a severe turbulence," he said.
Munyeza cited the recent refusal by doctors to accept medical aid cards, deferment of civil servants salaries by government, arrest of Occupy Africa Unity Square activists, winding bank queues, and continued harassment of citizens by government officials, among a host of challenges that require the population to fasten their safety belts.
He joins several other citizens, who have taken to social media platforms to vent their anger against government misrule and further deterioration of the economy.
The campaigns are aimed at pressing the government to urgently attend to the crisis before it triggers mass uprisings.
President Robert Mugabe yesterday admitted the country was experiencing a rough patch, but assured Zimbabweans that the situation would normalise soon.
He was speaking at the burial of the late Brigadier-General Felix Muchemwa at the national shrine yesterday.
Munyeza was recently summoned by the police after publishing a document, urging Zimbabweans to brace for harder times.
In his latest publication, he claims Zimbabwe is already in the midst of economic turbulence.
"A little while ago, I warned of a severe turbulence, we have now entered into a severe turbulence," he said.
Munyeza cited the recent refusal by doctors to accept medical aid cards, deferment of civil servants salaries by government, arrest of Occupy Africa Unity Square activists, winding bank queues, and continued harassment of citizens by government officials, among a host of challenges that require the population to fasten their safety belts.
He joins several other citizens, who have taken to social media platforms to vent their anger against government misrule and further deterioration of the economy.
The campaigns are aimed at pressing the government to urgently attend to the crisis before it triggers mass uprisings.
President Robert Mugabe yesterday admitted the country was experiencing a rough patch, but assured Zimbabweans that the situation would normalise soon.
He was speaking at the burial of the late Brigadier-General Felix Muchemwa at the national shrine yesterday.
Source - newsday