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Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 26 January 2026
📘 Source: ZimLive

HARARE – Former Citizens Coalition for Change leader Nelson Chamisa has formally returned to frontline politics, unveiling what he called Agenda 2026, a broad-based citizens’ movement aimed at unseating President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government and delivering what he described as a “fresh start” for Zimbabwe. Speaking at a press briefing on Wednesday after nearly two years out of active politics, Chamisa said Zimbabwe was facing a “crisis of governance” marked by disputed elections, economic collapse, corruption and institutional decay. “I left the dance floor hoping somebody else would occupy it, but it has remained vacant.

I have seen it fit to return to dance for my nation, for the citizens and for the future,” Chamisa said. He accused the government of presiding over rigged elections, state capture and the erosion of citizens’ dignity, saying the promise of independence had been “hijacked”. “Zimbabwe is gripped by disputed national processes, deepening economic hardships, political uncertainty, social collapse and moral decay,” he said.

Chamisa said that Agenda 2026 was not a political party, but a citizens’ movement designed to transcend party, tribe, race and class. “This is not about positions or personalities. It is about purpose.

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It is a movement by the citizens, for the citizens and from the citizens,” he said. With no clear form or structure for his movement, Chamisa’s approach will revive lingering scepticism among critics who argue that his leadership style remains overly personalised. As leader of the Citizens Coalition for Change, Chamisa deliberately avoided formal structures under what he termed “strategic ambiguity”, a strategy supporters later blamed for leaving the party exposed to capture by self-styled secretary general Sengezo Tshabangu.

That episode culminated in the recall of dozens of CCC MPs and councillors and Chamisa’s eventual decision to abandon the party altogether. His renewed insistence on a loosely defined “citizens’ movement”, rather than a clearly constituted organisation with defined roles, institutions and lines of authority, will raise questions over whether he has fully internalised the lessons of the CCC’s collapse, or whether the emphasis remains on mass mobilisation around a central figure rather than durable institution-building. He said the movement would focus on five key pillars: Building a new national consensus; reclaiming citizen agency and leadership, preparing for a future citizens’ government; driving a “moral revolution” and re-engaging the international community Chamisa said unity would be built “organically from below” through dialogue, consultation and consensus, rather than elite-driven politics.

“We fall together, we rise together. There is no separate destiny for a few,” he said. Chamisa placed strong emphasis on Zimbabweans in the diaspora, describing them as the “backbone” of the economy and promising them a central role in the movement’s structures and global advocacy campaign.

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Originally published by ZimLive • January 26, 2026

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