NewsPoliticsBy Nigel PfundeHARARE — The Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 (CAB3) activation campaign continued across the capital on Tuesday, reaching Harare South in the afternoon.Harare Provincial Commissar Voyage Dambuza, leading the campaign said the initial outreach in Warren Park and Kuwadzana over the weekend drew strong public response.“Those two districts set the bar,” Dambuza said. “Now we are taking that energy to every corner of Harare from Hopley to Mbare and beyond.”Part of the bumper crowd in MbareResidents in the two suburbs openly declared support for CAB3, stating the Bill represents “a decisive instrument for national progress.”Dambuza adopted a “classroom style” approach, breaking down the Bill clause by clause to improve public understanding.Addressing hundreds of party supporters under a marquee, he framed the proposed amendments as a legal and economic necessity rather than political convenience.“Here in Hopley, we do not just shout slogans, we understand the law,” Dambuza said.He urged residents not to fear CAB3 and questioned the crowd on whether they had not received their title deeds.
In Mbare, supporters responded with chants of “7 years, 7 years.”Leave a ReplyCancel reply NewsPoliticsBy Nigel PfundeHARARE — The Constitutional Amendment Bill No. In Mbare, supporters responded with chants of “7 years, 7 years.” By Nigel PfundeHARARE — The Constitutional Amendment Bill No. In Mbare, supporters responded with chants of “7 years, 7 years.” HARARE — The Constitutional Amendment Bill No.
3 (CAB3) activation campaign continued across the capital on Tuesday, reaching Harare South in the afternoon. Harare Provincial Commissar Voyage Dambuza, leading the campaign said the initial outreach in Warren Park and Kuwadzana over the weekend drew strong public response. “Those two districts set the bar,” Dambuza said.
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“Now we are taking that energy to every corner of Harare from Hopley to Mbare and beyond.” Residents in the two suburbs openly declared support for CAB3, stating the Bill represents “a decisive instrument for national progress.” Dambuza adopted a “classroom style” approach, breaking down the Bill clause by clause to improve public understanding. Addressing hundreds of party supporters under a marquee, he framed the proposed amendments as a legal and economic necessity rather than political convenience. “Here in Hopley, we do not just shout slogans, we understand the law,” Dambuza said.
He urged residents not to fear CAB3 and questioned the crowd on whether they had not received their title deeds. In Mbare, supporters responded with chants of “7 years, 7 years.”
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