Luapula Member of Parliament (MP) Peter Machungwa has accused Patriotic Front (PF) president Michael Sata of diverting public attention from the failure of his party’s pact with the United Party for National Development (UPND) by continuously cricising the sale of Zamtel.
Dr Machungwa said in an interview that Mr Sata should desist from gaining political mileage by using the part-privatisation of the telecommunications firm.
He said Mr Sata was attempting to deflect public attention from the failed PF-UPND Pact and was now spending his time attacking the Government over the sale of Zamtel.
He said it was wrong for Mr Sata to continue attacking President Rupiah Banda and the Government over the sale of Zamtel and Zanaco.
Government recently announced the sale of 75 per cent shareholding in Zamtel to Lap Green Networks of Libya.
[pullquote]“Government embarked on the privatisation process in order to save some of these parastatals like Zamtel and Zanaco from total collapse and ensuring that they remained viable.
“Their sale was inevitable looking at the circumstances and their performance. The two parastatals were not making profits, and so it is wrong for Mr Sata to come and make negative statements about the whole process and threaten that he would re-nationalise the companies if he came into office,” he said.[/pullquote]
Dr Machungwa said the PF leader should not pretend not to be aware of conditions that necessitated the sale of parastatal companies in the country.
He said the sale of Zamtel was important in ensuring that it remained viable and able to contribute to the well-being of the Zambian people through job creation.
He said the Government decided to sell the company in the best interest of the country to save Zamtel from collapsing.
Dr Machungwa cautioned opposition parties against constantly attacking investment
initiatives, saying such actions would scare away would-be investors.
“Government embarked on the privatisation process in order to save some of these parastatals like Zamtel and Zanaco from total collapse and ensuring that they remained viable.
“Their sale was inevitable looking at the circumstances and their performance. The two parastatals were not making profits, and so it is wrong for Mr Sata to come and make negative statements about the whole process and threaten that he would re-nationalise the companies if he came into office,” he said.
He urged Mr Sata to concentrate on the pact and avoid unreasonable attacks on Government policies.
Dr Machungwa also said the launch of the UPND-PF Pact last week did not bring anything different to the Zambian people and only exposed the fact that the two leaders had failed to agree on who should stand for the position of president in next year’s general elections.
Meanwhile, the Committee of Citizens has condemned former vice-president Enoch Kavindele and PF spokesperson Given Lubinda for their criticism of the part-privatisation of Zamtel.
In a statement in Lusaka yesterday, Committee of Citizens executive director Gregory Chifire said the privatisation of Zamtel was the most successful deal in the history of the privatisation process in Zambia.
“We are therefore surprised by the petty and childish attacks made by Mr Enoch Kavindele and Mr Given Lubinda against Ms Dora Siliya merely designed to embarrass and not to build the country and its progressive policies and programmes,” Mr Chifire said.
He said that in 2002, Mr Kavindele was vice-president when Konkola Copper Mines was sold for a ‘scandalous’ US$25 million, the money he said the mines was able to generate in a week.
With the rise of copper prices on the international market, the $25 million was made in few days.
[ Times of Zambia ]