CCM
Secretary-General Abdulrahman Kinana addresses a public rally in Mwanza
yesterday. Mr Kinana was in Mwanza Region in the final leg of his
countrywide tour.
PHOTO | MICHAEL JAMSON
By Bernard Lugongo,The Citizen Reporter
Posted Monday, June 29 2015 at 08:29
Posted Monday, June 29 2015 at 08:29
IN SUMMARY
· CCM
Secretary-General Abdulrahman Kinana tells rally in Mwanza during a
tour of the region that the party should be led by people who are not in
government to give it more supervisory and oversight powers
Dar es Salaam. The
Chama Cha Mapinduzi [CCM] is planning to revamp its structure in a bid to
enhance its effectiveness in overseeing the government by putting in
place a system in which party leaders will not be part of the
government.
CCM
secretary general Abdulrahman Kinana stated yesterday at a public rally
in Mwanza that one of the things he has learnt over time was that the
party doesn’t have enough powers to supervise the government much as it
is the one which formed it, having won the elections.
He
told hundreds of Mwanza residents who attended the rally meant to
conclude his 26-month countrywide that he started soon after he was
appointed secretary general. The tour was meant to strengthen the party
and assess how the CCM election manifesto for the 2010 elections was
implemented.
“We
want to exclude the President and his ministers from party leadership;
the party should be in the hands of other members, not the Executive,”
Mr Kinana said.
“Our
aim is to provide the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) ample
powers to oversee the government because the government belongs to the
party.”
Mr
Kinana said that during his trips, he learnt that even party leaders at
the grassroots level were complaining over some problems that have been
introduced by the government but they lacked the mandate to reprimand
the culpable public officials.
“This
situation disappoints citizens when they note that even leaders of the
party which is in power are also complaining,” he said.
The
party supremo said he was also not happy with some of the laws that
Parliament—which has an overwhelming CCM majority—has passed while they
are adversely affecting the citizens.
He wondered why the government has been reluctant to remove bad laws that seemed to displease the majority of the people.
“The
sad thing is that I have never seen the government withdraw laws which
were clearly bad to the people, while it kept on enacting more such
laws,” he said.
Mr Kinana also told off government leaders who shy from of going to the citizens to hear about challenges facing them.
“There
are only a few ministers who bother to go to listen to the people; most
of them prefer going abroad or attending seminars, forgetting that
their positions are meant to offer service to the people,” he said.
Earlier,
CCM ideology and publicity secretary Nape Nnauye gave the assurance
that the party would not entertain candidates who use money to buy
leadership.
He
said CCM was not selling leadership and warned the aspirants against
corrupting the members of the party in order win in the intra-party
nominations.
“I
am ready to lead the youth in campaigning against any person who uses
money to bribe people so that he or she gets leadership. Such kind of
person won’t have any chance during the coming General Election,” he
said.
Mr
Nnauye’s remarks come at a time when, CCM is readying for next month’s
sittings in Dodoma where it will nominate its presidential candidate.
This
year, the party has seen a significant number of presidential hopefuls
who have picked nomination forms in a bid to take over from President
Jakaya Kikwete.
Until
yesterday, the number of those who collected nomination forms reached
42, with only four days remaining for aspirants to collect and return
the documents.
Meanwhile,
most of those who had earlier picked up forms are still collecting
signatures of supporters without whom they candidacy cannot be
considered by the party’s topmost government leadership.
Mr
Nnauye also used yesterday’s platform to shower praise on Mr Kinana for
what he described as a job well done during his tenure as the party’s
secretary general.
He said during his leadership, Mr Kinana has managed to move the party from the office to “the people out there”.
He
said through his visits, Mr Kinana managed to push for implementation
of projects that were part of the CCM 2010 Election Manifesto. For
instance, there were some areas where dispensaries were constructed but
were had not operating for years and Mr Kinana ensured they become
functional, he said.
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