EU sees progress for Zim under ED President Mnangagwa
President Mnangagwa

President Mnangagwa

Lovemore Zigara, Midlands Correspondent
ZIMBABWE has made significant progress through economic, political and electoral reforms since President Mnangagwa took over as the country’s leader in November last year.

Speaking to journalists on the sidelines of a civil society meeting in Gweru yesterday, European Union Ambassador to Zimbabwe, Mr Philippe Van Damme, said it is understandable that all reforms could not be achieved within 100 days that the President has been in office.

Among some of President Mnangagwa’s successes during his first 100 days in office is opening the economy to investment, giving security of tenure to all farmers, facilitating national healing and reconciliation as well as reforming the police force.

“There have been positives to issues to do with reforms in this new dispensation but we must note that everything cannot be achieved within the 100 days the President enunciated on his inauguration,” he said.

“In terms of commitment we have had all kind of positives like issues to do with economic reforms, political reforms and electoral reforms in general. What needs to be done is to translate all these commitments to deliverables. Of course, we cannot achieve everything within 100 days in these deliverables. It can’t happen nowhere in the world but of course you have to make steps in that direction.”

Mr Van Damme said there had been significant progress in as far as electoral reforms are concerned with the major achievement being the success of the Biometric Voter registration exercise.

“On preparation for the elections, the calendar is tight so a lot of things still needs to be done but there has been quite some progress. If 18 months ago people would say we would have a new Bio Metric Voters Roll of 5,3 million people including 60 percent of those registered younger than 40 nobody would have taken it seriously,” he said.

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