Calls On People To Rise Against The Govt
In a bombshell, militant and vocal war veterans leader Blessed Geza – whose nickname in coincidentally “Bombshell” – has demanded angrily and emotionally that President Emmerson Mnangagwa must urgently resign or face a messy political endgame, urging a street mass uprising against him on 31 March 2025.
Threatening fire and brimstone against Mnangagwa and his political and business allies, whom he said are corrupt, looting and destroying the country, Geza, who recently opened the floodgates against the President accusing him of nepotism, cronyism and incompetence, said the man nicknamed “Crocodile” must go now or face a disastrous ending.
In an ominous message, Geza accused Mnangagwa of a series of crimes, ranging from being an impostor, spy and sellout during the 1970s liberation struggle, to corruption and running a kakistocracy (governance by the least suitable and capable), and a kleptocrcacy; rule by thieves involving a network of family, business and political allies. Geza accused Mnangagwa of being involved in trying to kill Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga through poisoning, a sore point in the succession battle.
He said war veterans are willing to die for Chiwenga whom he defended over recent attacks by Zanu PF spokesperson Chris Mutsvangwa, a Mnangagwa ally.
Mutsvangwa described Chiwenga as illiterate, incompetent and a dubious liberation struggle commander.
Delving deep into history, contemporary politics and sleazy family issues, including relationships, while swearing at his enemies, Geza said he will expose a whole lot of things soon and deal with those targeted.
The sleazy issues featured Mnangagwa’s wife, First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa, Attorney-General Virginia Mabiza and the President, Mutsvangwa’s wife Monica, who is Women Affairs minister, and Chiwenga’s former wife Marry.
This came as political tensions and infighting over Zanu PF’s succession battle between Mnangagwa and Chiwenga intensified amid looming open confrontation. Geza sternly warned police Commissioner-General Stephen Mutamba, a staunch ally of the President, not to deploy police to try to stop anti-Mnangagwa protestors on 31 March.
He said police and the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) should not fight the people, while defending Mnangagwa who is vulnerable without the support of security forces. Geza did not mention the role of the army, Zimbabwe’s political power brokers and kingmakers, in the looming conflict, suggesting it was on his faction’s side.
Chiwenga’s faction is military-backed. He however complained that the army was starving and there was corruption in its tender supplies run by Mnangagwa’s corrupt networks.
This all comes as Chiwenga’s military-backed Zanu PF faction moves to mobilise and leverage mounting social discontent and popular pressure to remove Mnangagwa who first came to power through a coup in November 2017 before legitimising himself through disputed elections.
Geza spoke about the state of the economy, Mnangagwa and his family, administrative and business cronies, political allies, corruption, the judiciary, tenders, corruption, plundering, the People’s Own Savings Bank saga, political and civil liberties, democratic rights, the arrest of journalist Blessed Mhlanga and elite relationships, among many other things, menacingly warning an unstoppable political wave is looming.