Today is the 18 April 2015, Zimbabwe is 35 years old! There will
be no celebrations or fanfare across the land because there is really little
cause to celebrate. Let it be the day of deep reflection. Let it be the day
history will say we stopped to take a long look at ourselves, at the political
and economic hell-hole we had dug for ourselves and, instead of wallowing in
self-pity or shooting off in a panic on yet another ill-thought hare-brain
escape scheme, we sobered up.
We sobered up to stop the rat-race of the last 35 years that had
landed us in this hell-hole in the first place. The ensuing peace had allowed
us to take directions of where we and to reaffirm where we wanted to go as a
nation. We did not come out with a clear plan how we were going to get
ourselves out of the hell-hole that was to follow in time what matters is that
we had made the start.
The
Zanu PF government has announced that the theme of this year’s 35th Independence
Anniversary will be; "Zimbabwe @35: Consolidating Unity, Peace and
Economic Sovereignty".
Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister Ignatius Chombo has said the theme was inspired by the fact that at 35 years, Zimbabwe was accelerating the implementation of Zim-Asset and enjoying economic sovereignty as espoused under the indigenisation policy buoyed by unity and peace. No doubt this will be the recurring theme in all the speeches the party leaders will be delivering across the land. Having prepared a speech, as we all know, Zanu PF politicians are not the type to shy away from delivering it, especially Mugabe, regardless of how inappropriate and contradictory it may be. They will soldier on and deliver their speech regardless, just like Robert (not his real name) a former high school mate.
Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister Ignatius Chombo has said the theme was inspired by the fact that at 35 years, Zimbabwe was accelerating the implementation of Zim-Asset and enjoying economic sovereignty as espoused under the indigenisation policy buoyed by unity and peace. No doubt this will be the recurring theme in all the speeches the party leaders will be delivering across the land. Having prepared a speech, as we all know, Zanu PF politicians are not the type to shy away from delivering it, especially Mugabe, regardless of how inappropriate and contradictory it may be. They will soldier on and deliver their speech regardless, just like Robert (not his real name) a former high school mate.
Every
year our high school hosted a ball to which girls from our neighbouring school
were invited. Each girl was given a ticket and three lucky girls whose numbers
came out of the hat were given a prize. Robert was picked to be the Master of
Ceremony.
Instead of calling out the numbers and just
giving out the prize as was expected, Robert staged the whole thing as if this
was a beauty pageant, he even played Steve Wonder’s “Is she lovely!” song as
each girl walked up to collect her prize. He even had a running commentary of
the “Second Princess” and then the “First Princess”.
When it
came to the “Beauty Queen!” as luck would have it girl happened to be this 13
or 14 year old who had absolutely nothing in the form of beauty features to
recommend her. Worse still, the girl was fighting a losing battle with pimples
– the curse of puberty. Robert, using phases no doubt borrowed from the Miss
World Beauty Pageant, rattle on about how beautiful the girl, “talk and
elegant” (the girl was short and fat) but it was the “smooth and lovely face”
that killed it!
After
three and half decades of denying that mismanagement and corruption were these
cancerous problems destroying the economy the cancer have been allowed the time
to grow and spread. Today the gross mismanagement and rampant corruption have
become tumours the size of tennis balls and there are everywhere.
Mugabe
had hoped to rig economic recovery by throwing lots and lots of ZimAsset money
at the economy and hopefully revive it without ever having to address the
underlying problems of mismanagement and corrupts and hence his request for a
staggering $27 billion in the ZimAsset plan. No donor was willing to bankroll
the hare-brain scheme.
Mugabe’s
ZimAsset economic recovery plan is dead in the water; not even his Chinese
friends would fund such a wasteful project. Like my High School friend, Robert,
the regime still talks of “accelerating the implementation of Zim-Asset”
knowing the plan is dead.
The
national economic is in real serious trouble; government is failing to pay the
civil servants’ wages let alone anything else, unemployment has soared to
nauseating heights of 90%, 16% of the our people or 2 million are now living in
abject poverty, etc. Of course the regime is doing its best to deny the
economic meltdown.
There
say you can convince a blind man he is having duck and not chicken but if there
is hot pepper, he will know. Zimbabweans are having a dish of red-eye hot
chills and nothing else and they know the national economy is in a mess.
The two
questions we must now reflect on and answer is who did we get into this mess?
Second, how are we going to get out?
We did
not get into this mess by accident; we sealed our own fate way back in 1980
when the nation did nothing to stop Robert Mugabe’s political machinations
undermining the judiciary by appointing Zanu PF party loyalists, denying the
people freedom of expression and undermining press freedom by politicizing the
public media, etc. The nation accept Mugabe’s systematic erosion of the
people’s political voice and power as long as his regime delivered mass
economic prosperity which he never seem to tire of promise.
By the
mid1990s, when it was evident that instead of mass prosperity all the ordinary
Zimbabweans were ever going to get from Mugabe and Zanu PF is mass poverty; it
was, alas, too late to stop Mugabe. The people had lost both their political
voice and power, in the form of a meaningful free and fair vote!
Of
course it was very naïve of the people to very even believed that their
economic rights could ever be guaranteed in a political system in which they
had no say. What the people should have asked themselves is what is Mugabe
failed to deliver mass prosperity what recourse will we have for redress?
Over
the years many people have argued that mismanagement and corruption were the
cancers destroying the Zimbabwe economy. Mugabe and Zanu PF have vehemently
denied there was no mismanagement and corruption and accused the “evil sanctions
imposed by West” for the economic down turn. In a healthy and functioning
democracy where the electorate a meaningful free vote, the people will decide
who has won the economic argument and therefore will form the next government.
Not so in Zimbabwe, because the people had lost their vote and elections were a
formality tolerated as long as it did not produce regime change.
As
stated above, mismanagement and corruption were denied for decades allowing
them to grow and spread because having usurped the people’s political voice and
power Mugabe was able to impose the de facto one-party state on the nation. The
people could not remove Mugabe and Zanu PF from office and hence the nation was
stuck with whatever economic policy the regime saw fit to pursue.
By 2000
the nation was fed up with Mugabe and Zanu PF and the national consensus was
that there must be democratic changes to allow free, fair and credible
elections. There were a number of opportunities to deliver the changes but by
far the best chances were during the 2008 2013 GNU when the changes were listed
as a raft of democratic reforms in the Global Political Agreement.
Sadly
at the end of the GNU’s five years life not even one of the reforms had been
implemented. Not one!
The
reforms were designed to dismantle the Zanu PF dictatorship and therefore it
would be naive to expect a tyrant like Mugabe would ever want to do this. The
task of implemented the reforms therefore fall on Morgan Tsvangirai and his MDC
friends. They were reminded countless time to implement the reforms but ignored
the warnings. It should also be noted that Tsvangirai threatened to quit the
GNU but ever since when Mugabe gave him the $4 million Highlands mansion
Tsvangirai and MDC cooperated with Zanu PF especially in making sure no reforms
were implemented.
There
are no other logical explanations as to why MDC failed to get even one reform
implemented other than that MDC leaders are corrupt and breathtakingly
incompetent.
There
is one other group who must shoulder the responsibility for wasting the
opportunity to end the Zanu PF dictatorship during the GNU; the Zimbabwean
people. Although people have talked endlessly about democratic change; “Chinja
maitiro! Guqula izenzo!” (Change your ways!); when push came to shove it was clear
they did not have the foggiest idea what these changes were or why they were
important. If the people had understood what the democratic changes/reforms
were then there is no doubt they would have known this was the nation’s ticket
out of the hell Zanu PF had landed us in. They would have seen to it that MDC
implemented all the reforms!
As a
way out of this economic hell, some people have been calling for mass street
protest. To what end and purpose, I would ask?
Those
who say to demand that this government does something to end the economic
crisis. My answer to them is that this regime ran out of ideas years ago and
has since given up of it coming up with any policies to deliver mass
prosperity. Of course, the regime will never admit that it has run out of
ideas, indeed this time it will repeat its last statement that it is
“accelerating the implementation of its ZimAsset plan”.
Engaging
Zanu PF on whether or not ZimAsset is dead or alive is an exercise in futility
akin to the corruption or sanctions debate in who is right or wrong is
irrelevant as long as Zanu PF remains in power it is the party’s policy that
will prevail.
The
way out of this hell is that the people should decide who rules the country. If
the people are to stage street protests then they must demand the
implementation of all the democratic reforms that should have been implemented
during the GNU.
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