Zanu PF scoffed at the veteran blessed Geza’s bid to drive away President Emmerson Mnangagwa, offering a united front despite highlighting flashy terrorism within the ruling party.
Geza called for a nationwide demonstration that led to his stay on Monday. The exiled members of the Zanu PF Central Committee have registered their complaints with the government of Mnangagwa.
The move was laughed at as a government failure, but observers signal their stay as a sign of dissatisfaction among Zimbabweans.
Christopher Mutosvanwa, a spokesman for Zanu PF, who spoke recently in Harare, said the ruling party swiped over the militant Geza to show no signs of decline.
“Zanu PF is a mass party. We are not pioneers. Along the way, there are other individuals in the mass party who have specific ideas and sometimes they may try to test them along those ideas.
“We are working in the work of a unified party, and his agenda of the individual’s rejection and the uncooperative removal of leadership from power has been rejected by people,” Mutsvangwa said.
Zanu PF has reports of factionalism. One is a faction that supports an extension of President Mnangawa’s control beyond two constitutional terms.
Geza leads a faction who claims that Mnangagwa has stepped down before the end of his final term and pledged to remove him from power.