Once upon a time, a few moons ago although I remember
it as if it was yesterday, I visited a number of High Schools and Colleges up
and down Zimbabwe to talking about the UN Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. The students had no problem defending the right and freedom to be
heard, as long as it was their right or freedom that was at stake. Having
secured their own individual right to speak they firmly believed that right
included telling others to shut up!
The impulse to be heard and resist being dominated,
is very strong and once heard the impulse to silence everyone else and dominate
is even stronger. It is the primeval default setting. The acceptance of other
people rights and freedoms, the concept of universal rights and freedoms, goes against
the primeval grain of securing the right and freedom for one’s self and
dominate by denying the same to others!
Talking to Nelson Chamisa and his MDC Alliance
supporters on the recent High Court rulings on the leadership battle has been worse
than a rerun of the High School student Human Rights debate. The student
allowed one to read out the universal rights and freedoms and they accepted the
rights and freedoms as everyone’s entitlement.
The MDC supporters will not admit that Nelson
Chamisa did not follow the MDC’s own constitution in seizing power following
Morgan Tsvangirai’s death. They prefer to airbrush the details of Chamisa’s
ascendancy out, how he got into power is irrelevant. The see in the High Court
Judgement the hand of Zanu PF “destabilising” the MDC.
If one accepted the political events in their
logical sequence then it is a historic fact that Chamisa did not follow the
party’s own constitution. Those pretending otherwise are just being selective,
they want to ignore the constitution because it is not servicing their selfish
purpose. In other words Chamisa shot himself in the foot by ignoring the party’s
constitution and the penalty of destabilising the party is therefore self-inflicted.
The tag-of-war between democratic mordenizers and
the primeval dinosaurs seeking to dominate has been going on not just in MDC
but in the ruling party Zanu PF itself with even worse and far reaching disastrous
consequences to the nation.
The clarion cry before independence was “One man!
One vote!” It was out of the need to secure political dominance that Robert
Mugabe and his Zanu PF cronies have denied the people their freedoms and rights
including the right to a meaningful vote. The root cause of Zimbabwe’s economic
meltdown and political paralysis, is the de facto one-party dictatorship.
When Mnangagwa and his fellow November 2017
military coup plotters seized power from Mugabe, they accepted the need to
democratic change. It is ironic that the same court that ruled Chamisa’s
seizure of power unconstitutional, ruled the military coup “legal, justified
and constitutional”.
It should be noted for the record that Nelson
Chamisa and his fellow MDC leaders supported the November 2017 military coup.
Chamisa has publicly admitted Morgan Tsvangirai died “a bitter” man because
Mnangagwa did not keep his promise to form a GNU after the coup. In other words
the coup was justified and fine as long as it helped MDC leaders up the greasy
political power pole.
Mnangagwa called the post November Zimbabwe a “new
democratic dispensation, a Second Republic”. He promised to hold free, fair and
credible elections. The crocodile instinct in him to rig elections were to
power to resist!
Everyone questioned Nelson Chamisa sincerity in
challenging Mnangawa’s victory in the July 2018 elections given MDC had
participated knowing fully well Zanu PF would rig the elections. ZEC failed to produce
something as basic as a verified voters’ roll and yet MDC participated
regardless.
The High Court judgement on Chamisa’s violation of
the MDC constitution when he seized power under lined his hypocrisy in calling
Mnangagwa “illegitimate” when each one of them is illegitimate.
If Zimbabwe is ever going to implement the
democratic reforms necessary to dismantle the de facto one-party dictatorship and
restore the individual freedoms and rights as envisaged in the UN Universal
Rights then the country must look to others, not Zanu PF or MDC, to implement
the reforms. Both Zanu PF and MDC leaders have shown that their base primeval
instinct to dominate is more powerful than the reformist democratic instincts.