
Zimbabwe opposition leader advocates for “new hands” to lead
The leader of Zimbabwe’s main opposition Movement for Democratic Change, Morgan Tsvangirai, says it is time for the older generation to step back and allow “new hands” to lead, raising prospects of leadership change in the party.
“I am looking at the imminent prospects of us as the older generation leaving the levers of leadership to allow the younger generation to take forward this huge task that we started together so many years ago with our full blessing and support,” Tsvangirai said in a statement.
According to him “we must recognize the imperative that new hands, with the full blessing of the people, must take this struggle and this country forward.”
Tsvangirai has been the opposition torch bearer since 2000 and his bitter rivalry with former president Robert Mugabe was often punctuated by violence against opposition supporters.
Last year in August, Tsvangirai reunited with former allies to forge a coalition to challenge the ruling ZANU-PF party in presidential and parliamentary elections due later this year.
Tsvangirai has three deputies in the MDC, including the youthful 39-year-old Nelson Chamisa, who is often touted as his future successor to Tsvangirai.
Tsvangirai, a former trade union leader who has been at the helm of the MDC since its formation in 1999, disclosed in June 2016 that he had cancer.
Last year, he spent weeks in a South African hospital receiving treatment.