News / National
Zanu-PF annual conference preparation begin
26 Sep 2013 at 03:58hrs | Views
Preparations for the 14th Zanu-PF annual national people's conference has started with the revolutionary party tasking its commissariat department to fill in all district and provincial posts ahead of the event. The party's secretary for administration Didymus Mutasa, yesterday said the watershed event to be held in Chinhoyi (Mashonaland West province) in December, was critical as it came after Zanu-PF's crashing victory that "finished" the MDC-T.
"Preparations have started. The commissar (Webster Shamu) has been tasked to tell all the provinces to elect their district officials. After that he will go to provinces to supervise the election of provincial officials in readiness for the conference. We are confident Mashonaland West will have finished constructing the conference centre by December," he said.
The party requires US$10 million for the conference centre in Chinhoyi to be ready by December this year. Mutasa said the District Coordinating Committees that were disbanded last year, would not be re-constituted.
The watershed conference comes after Zanu-PF whitewashed the opposition MDC-T with President Mugabe, the party's First Secretary, garnering 61,09 percent of the vote that gave the party an overwhelming two-thirds majority in Parliament against the MDC-T's 33,94 percent vote.
This means Zanu-PF has 197 seats after winning 160 in elective constituencies and gaining others following the division of the 60 seats reserved for women and those elected by proportional representation in each province.
Mr Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC-T has only 70 seats and there are two for the MDC faction led by Professor Welshman Ncube.
This gives Zanu-PF just under 73 percent of the total seats in the National Assembly, but well over the two thirds majority of 180 seats. The National Assembly comprises 210 constituencies, of which Zanu-PF won 160, or more than 76 percent of the total, MDC-T won 49 and an independent candidate won one.
Mutasa said the party would be celebrating and thanking party members for paying heed to President Mugabe's call for them to overwhelmingly embrace the Bhora Mugedhi/Ibhola Egedhini concept that has so far yielded results for the party. He said this was one of the major annual people's conference resolutions last December in Gweru.
"We are grateful to our people for voting for our party overwhelmingly. It now remains to us to fulfil the promises we made to them. We need to revamp our structures and deliver to people what they expect," he said.
Mutasa said the party's national chairman Simon Khaya Moyo would meet representatives of committees such as the finance, agenda, health, transport, social welfare, information and publicity among others to start work. Mutasa said the Presidium was grateful that people voted overwhelmingly for the revolutionary party in Masvingo, Matabeleland South, Manicaland, Mashonaland Central, East and West provinces and the Midlands, while indications were that the revolutionary party would make major inroads in Matabeleland North, Harare and Bulawayo provinces in 2018 polls.
"Preparations have started. The commissar (Webster Shamu) has been tasked to tell all the provinces to elect their district officials. After that he will go to provinces to supervise the election of provincial officials in readiness for the conference. We are confident Mashonaland West will have finished constructing the conference centre by December," he said.
The party requires US$10 million for the conference centre in Chinhoyi to be ready by December this year. Mutasa said the District Coordinating Committees that were disbanded last year, would not be re-constituted.
The watershed conference comes after Zanu-PF whitewashed the opposition MDC-T with President Mugabe, the party's First Secretary, garnering 61,09 percent of the vote that gave the party an overwhelming two-thirds majority in Parliament against the MDC-T's 33,94 percent vote.
This means Zanu-PF has 197 seats after winning 160 in elective constituencies and gaining others following the division of the 60 seats reserved for women and those elected by proportional representation in each province.
Mr Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC-T has only 70 seats and there are two for the MDC faction led by Professor Welshman Ncube.
This gives Zanu-PF just under 73 percent of the total seats in the National Assembly, but well over the two thirds majority of 180 seats. The National Assembly comprises 210 constituencies, of which Zanu-PF won 160, or more than 76 percent of the total, MDC-T won 49 and an independent candidate won one.
Mutasa said the party would be celebrating and thanking party members for paying heed to President Mugabe's call for them to overwhelmingly embrace the Bhora Mugedhi/Ibhola Egedhini concept that has so far yielded results for the party. He said this was one of the major annual people's conference resolutions last December in Gweru.
"We are grateful to our people for voting for our party overwhelmingly. It now remains to us to fulfil the promises we made to them. We need to revamp our structures and deliver to people what they expect," he said.
Mutasa said the party's national chairman Simon Khaya Moyo would meet representatives of committees such as the finance, agenda, health, transport, social welfare, information and publicity among others to start work. Mutasa said the Presidium was grateful that people voted overwhelmingly for the revolutionary party in Masvingo, Matabeleland South, Manicaland, Mashonaland Central, East and West provinces and the Midlands, while indications were that the revolutionary party would make major inroads in Matabeleland North, Harare and Bulawayo provinces in 2018 polls.
Source - herald