Free cash rained down on Manicaland villagers who ignored the bad weather to get paid. Crowds swarmed Marange High School in Zimunya as Mutare North, West, and South each pocketed twenty-five grand from the Presidential Constituency Empowerment Fund. That brings the total disbursed amount to seventy-five thousand dollars for the region.
Presidential advisor Paul Tungwarara claims this scheme dodges bureaucratic hurdles to put resources straight into local hands. He announced plans to take this nationwide after finishing up in the province. The goal involves hitting thirty-five thousand villages within six months through a new village-level fund to push devolution.
Tungwarara lectured the youth on maintaining stability while respecting elders and war veterans. High-profile guests monitored the proceedings, with Christopher Mutsvangwa, Monica Mutsvangwa, and Misheck Mugadza all showing face. Officials also handed out two truckloads of fertilizer and one thousand bicycles to sweeten the deal.
Promises were made to renovate Marange Hospital and fix teacher housing at the school. Mugadza praised the advisor for turning policies into real grassroots projects that fight poverty. Monica advised everyone to invest the money wisely in cooperatives or banks rather than wasting it.
Christopher hyped up the economic progress under the current administration. He bragged that fuel queues are history and grain silos stay full. The leadership evidently wants credit for fixing the country while they hand out checks to rural voters.
Presidential advisor Paul Tungwarara claims this scheme dodges bureaucratic hurdles to put resources straight into local hands. He announced plans to take this nationwide after finishing up in the province. The goal involves hitting thirty-five thousand villages within six months through a new village-level fund to push devolution.
Tungwarara lectured the youth on maintaining stability while respecting elders and war veterans. High-profile guests monitored the proceedings, with Christopher Mutsvangwa, Monica Mutsvangwa, and Misheck Mugadza all showing face. Officials also handed out two truckloads of fertilizer and one thousand bicycles to sweeten the deal.
Promises were made to renovate Marange Hospital and fix teacher housing at the school. Mugadza praised the advisor for turning policies into real grassroots projects that fight poverty. Monica advised everyone to invest the money wisely in cooperatives or banks rather than wasting it.
Christopher hyped up the economic progress under the current administration. He bragged that fuel queues are history and grain silos stay full. The leadership evidently wants credit for fixing the country while they hand out checks to rural voters.