COPE’s Deputy President and head of
elections received very well in Mpumalanga
Brian Kajengo
COPE had a fruitful door to door campaign
which gives it the strength to go from place to place. Further more COPE is intending
to have more membership than before, taking advantage of ANC’s division.
Sizile Ndlovu the Mpumalanga provincial leader was the
happiest man when he sees the respond by the members of the community.
“It was a door to door that will be in the
minds of the people in the Hazyview area for a long time to come. COPE’s Deputy
President, Comrade Willy Madisha and the head of National Elections in the
party Comrade Dennis Bloem touched base in Mpumalanga
and engaged in a door to door elections campaign in the small tourist town of Hazyview as well as
surrounding areas such as Polar. Mahushu, Shabalala etc.” Sizile Ndlovu said.
The two national leaders of COPE were
accompanied by, amongst others, the national organizer for COPE Comrade Sizile
Ndlovu and the provincial leadership.
“We were very well received in the area.
One could see that people are tired of the empty promises they received from
the ruling party. We told the people that it was high time that they voted for
an alternative party that will definitely address their challenges within a
reasonable period of time,” Ndlovu told COPE Mpumalanga’s communications
section.
He said it was evident that people still
lived without the basic source of life which is water.
“Indeed there is nothing, let alone humans,
that can survive without water. This has been a very serious challenge that the
communities in Mpumalanga
have been faced with. COPE is more than ready to make the necessary changes
when given the platform to do so by the voters,” Ndlovu said.
COPE in Mpumalanga says it is not only
water challenges that the people of the province are facing but there was an
issue of lack of jobs and the general lack of economy that would help in
developing the province.
Sizile
told the Bvunzamutupo the voice of SADC that the door to door campaigns by COPE
will continue in other parts of the country until just near the elections day.
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