CiviUnited Front national chairman Prof Ibrahim
Lipumba addresses members of the opposition party at its headquarters in
Dar es salaam yesterday.
There has been mixed reactions among party members who said the
co-chair of the Coalition of Peoples’ Constitution was going to resign
any time from now. Others had it that he was at will with CUF and
therefore he can resign at any time for whatever reason.
It was not immediately established whether Prof Lipumba has
tendered his resignation as the party national chairman but reports
obtained exclusively yesterday from the party senior members maintained
the Economist was intending to quit CUF.
However when Prof Lipumba showed up for a press conference at the
party’s headquarters in Buguruni in the outskirts of the city he simply
uttered words… “I respect the decision of my political party.”
He said CUF was an institution. According to him, it should be
managed as an institution but not as an individual, he said very briefly
without going into details.
Lipumba was supposed to address a press conference yesterday
morning in his office. However when the journalists went to his office
for the conference he was not there, only to find party elders who had
occupied his office.
Prof Lipumba has been CUF national chairman for two decades,
(1995-2015), and for him he was appointed national chairman just from a
team of party members. This means that any other potential party member
could as well be appointed the national chairman.
A party elder who declined to mention his name explained to
scribes that what the chairman (Prof Lipumba) meant was to respect the
decision of CUF to join Ukawa and amicably endorsing their flag bearer
in the coming General Election.”
CUF deputy secretary Magdalena Sakaya said that the majority of
elders in the party did not know the whereabouts of the national
chairman.
The elders had wanted to speak to him before before speaking to the media.
Another party elder who spoke on condition of anonymity pointed out
that no one knew what ‘our chairman was about to reveal the media. He
had advised the media to postpone the press conference untill next time .
Impeccable sources had it that Lipumba was not happy with Coalition of People Defending Constitution (Ukawa)
to invite former Prime Minister Edward Lowassa into the union and
has said it is ready to give him a chance to remove CCM out of power.
Amina Msonde CUF cadre said it’s their duty to show up at head
office to know what their leader wanted to say. “We didn’t come here
because of the ramous that our leader was going to resign. Those were
just manufactured lies and will not listen to them … we are here to
support him and chart strategies for the coalition.
Nurdin Msati also a CUF member also was in support of Amina saying he does expect Lipumba to quit CUF.
During the Chama cha Demokrasia na Maendeleo (Chadema) general
convention on Tuesday, Zanzibar’s First Vice President Seif Sharif Hamad
and presidential aspirant in the October polls (CUF) called on CCM
cadres to join the opposition.
He said “joining the opposition side is not a sin.”
“In Ukawa, there is enough human resources to run the country and
bring about economic development without any problem and therefore
people should not fear,” he said.
Responding on rumors that the CUF chairman Prof Ibrahim Lipumba has left the party, he discredited them as unfounded and untrue.
“The law requires any leader who wants to resign from the party to
write a letter to the party’s secretary general, we have not received
any such letter from Lipumba,” he said.
Former Zanzibar deputy minister for health Juma Duni Haji, who had
crossed over to Chadema and was endorsed Lowassa’s running mate
admitted that it was a tough decision to resign from his post but he
maintained that it was necessary in order to strengthen the alliance so
as to defeat CCM come the October polls.
“The current situation in the country must change,” he said.
“Now, our people are living in poor and deplorable conditions...we
are determined to address these challenges facing our people,” he
reassured the public.
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