One of Zambia’s main opposition parties, the Socialist Party (SP) has accused President Hakainde Hichilema of getting blinded by power which has started to affect his sound judgement and the vision he had for the country.
Leader of the SP, Fred M’membe, who laid the accusations in a statement issued in Lusaka on Sunday, said opposition parties were complaining about the lack of equality before the law under Hichilema’s administration due to the way he had been running the affairs of the country.
M’membe, one of the staunchest critics of the Hichilema administration, said the president had, instead of concentrating on governance, been going about tackling the opposition and labelling them lawbreakers.
M’membe lamented the fact that many opposition figures had been attacked by the ruling United Party for National Development (UPND) supporters, and whenever they complained to the police, no arrests or prosecutions had ever taken place.
“It seems power has gotten to Hichilema’s head and is starting to affect his judgement and vision – it’s blinding him quite fast,” M’membe said in the statement.
“By allowing opposition leaders to be unjustifiably arrested, detained and prosecuted, Mr Hichilema, those in power, are sending a dangerous signal that the criminal justice system can be used to persecute and fix opponents of the regime.
“The only antidote to the culture of venality is the readiness of our criminal justice system to apply the laws fairly and equally,” M’membe noted.
He added that it “was a well-known fact that throughout history, those who administer or control the criminal justice system, hold the power with the potential for abuse and tyranny and this was exactly what Hichilema was doing.”