Sunday, 22 February 2026

Mhlanga at UN in Geneva compare to Mahere in 2023 epitomises one step forward and three back! W Mukori

 @ Gabriel Manyati


When speaking in Geneva becomes a crime in Harare



The contrast is as stark as it is unsettling. In Geneva, the atmosphere is defined by a curated diplomatic silence, where the soft rustle of briefing papers and the measured cadence of human rights rapporteurs suggest a world of orderly accountability.


It is a space designed for the clinical examination of state conduct. Yet, for a Zimbabwean citizen like Blessed Mhlanga, the distance between the pristine halls of the Palais des Nations and the humid, tense political climate of Harare is non-existent.


When he stood before an international audience to articulate the lived realities of his compatriots, he was not merely delivering a report. He was performing a constitutional act.


However, the subsequent reaction from the Zimbabwean authorities suggests that in the eyes of the state, such speech is an act of jurisdictional transgression. The anxiety radiating from the capital reveals a profound insecurity.


To the ruling elite, the crime is not the content of the testimony but the audacity of the venue. The question that haunts the Zimbabwean body politic is why a citizen speaking truth to power in a global forum is perceived as a more significant threat than the systemic failures that necessitate such speech.


This hostility toward internationalised dissent is not a modern aberration but a consistent thread in the fabric of Zimbabwean governance.


The current threats against Mhlanga are the latest iteration of a historical project aimed at the total monopolisation of the national narrative.


We have seen this machinery in operation before, most notably in the early 2000s when the state treated independent journalism as an existential threat.


The forced closure of The Daily News in 2003 remains a seminal wound in our democratic memory, representing the physical dismantling of a counter-narrative. That era was defined by a legislative arsenal designed to stifle the inquisitive mind.


The Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Public Order and Security Act served as the twin pillars of a fortress intended to keep the truth in and the world out.


During those crisis years, journalists were not just reporters but were framed as agents of foreign influence, a trope that continues to be recycled with wearying regularity.


Even with the transition of 2017 and the promise of a new dispensation, the structural impulses of the state have remained remarkably static.


While the methods have evolved from the blunt force of the 2000s to more sophisticated forms of reputational management and digital controls, the underlying philosophy is unchanged. The state remains convinced that it owns the story of Zimbabwe.


When the internet was shut down in 2019, it was an admission that the state could no longer compete in the marketplace of ideas and thus chose to burn the market down.


The Geneva episode fits perfectly into this lineage. It reveals a state that equates criticism with destabilisation and transparency with treason.


The irony is that the more the state attempts to manage its image through the intimidation of journalists, the more it confirms the very accusations of authoritarianism it seeks to deny.


It is a cycle of repression where the pursuit of narrative control leads to the further erosion of international legitimacy.


The persecution of speech delivered to international human rights bodies is more than a violation of individual liberty. It is a direct assault on the 2013 Constitution.


Our supreme law is explicit in its protection of the freedom of expression and the right of every citizen to engage with both domestic and international institutions.


When a journalist is threatened for participating in a United Nations process, the state is effectively declaring that certain parts of the Constitution are suspended once a citizen crosses the border.


This creates a profound contradiction. The government frequently cites its adherence to constitutionalism when seeking international investment or diplomatic re-engagement, yet it punishes the exercise of those very constitutional rights when they result in unfavourable optics.


This tension brings us to the core of the sovereignty debate. There are two competing visions of what it means for Zimbabwe to be a sovereign nation.


The first is a democratic sovereignty, where the strength of the nation is derived from the ability of its citizens to critique, engage and improve its institutions.


In this model, the journalist who speaks in Geneva is a patriot because he holds the state to the standards it has publicly committed to upholding. The second vision is narrative sovereignty.


In this darker iteration, the state claims an exclusive right to define reality. It views the national story as private property.


Under this logic, any citizen who offers a different account of the Zimbabwean experience to the international community is viewed as a thief of the national image.


By punishing Mhlanga, the state is attempting to assert a form of sovereignty that excludes the people, effectively arguing that the state is the nation and the nation is the state.


The psychology of this response speaks volumes about the nature of power in Harare. Secure governments do not fear the testimony of a single journalist. Robust institutions do not tremble at the prospect of a briefing in Geneva.


The aggressive reaction to Mhlanga's speech reveals an institutional fragility that no amount of official propaganda can mask. There is a deep-seated fear that if the state loses control over the international narrative, it loses its grip on the mechanisms of political survival.


Consequently, the state frames international criticism as a form of economic sabotage or a threat to national security. This framing is a tactical necessity because it allows the state to bypass the substance of the critique and focus instead on the supposed motives of the critic.


However, the strategy of silencing critics abroad almost always backfires. In the digital age, the attempt to suppress a story only ensures it travels further and faster.


By threatening a journalist for speaking at a global forum, the Zimbabwean authorities have ensured that the human rights situation in the country receives far more scrutiny than it might have otherwise.


It is a self-defeating exercise in power. Instead of addressing the underlying issues raised in Geneva, the state has chosen to provide a fresh example of the very repression that was being discussed.


This suggests a leadership that is more concerned with the appearance of order than the functional reality of justice.


The fate of Blessed Mhlanga is not a solitary concern for the media fraternity. It is a litmus test for the Zimbabwean citizen.


If we accept that the state has the right to punish speech delivered beyond our borders, we are essentially consenting to a form of ideological imprisonment. We are agreeing that our rights as citizens are conditional and geographically bounded.


The democratic future of Zimbabwe depends entirely on whether we retain ownership of our voices.


A nation is not a monolith represented by a single official voice. It is a complex, often discordant choir of millions of people. To silence one voice because it spoke in a different room is to diminish the entire nation.


Ultimately, the integrity of our constitutional order is measured by how the state treats its most vocal critics. True national confidence does not manifest in the silencing of dissent but in the ability to withstand it.


If Zimbabwe is to truly claim its place among the community of nations, it must first stop fearing its own people.


The road to a prosperous and stable republic does not run through the interrogation rooms of the secret police or the threatening statements of government spokesmen. It runs through the unfettered exercise of the rights we gave ourselves in 2013.


We must remember that while the state may occupy the seats of power, the story of Zimbabwe belongs to the people of Zimbabwe, whether they are speaking in the streets of Harare or the halls of Geneva.


----------------Gabriel Manyati is a Zimbabwean journalist and analyst delivering incisive commentary on politics, human interest stories, and current affairs.


One of the great tragedies of our failed political system is our knack to undermine ourselves. We take one step forward and, serpiginously, fuliginously, take two or more steps backward. And, to rub insult to injury, it is the ordinary Zimbabweans who take the forward step and the ruling elite who drag us all back!


In 2023 it was none other than Advocate Fadzayi Mahere, then spokesperson of Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, CCC led by Advocate Nelson Chamisa, who graced the same pristine halls of the Palais des Nations in Geneva Blessed Mhlanga spoke from. 


Mahere ticked all the relevant boxes of being a victim of the Zanu PF brutality - she had spend time in the regime’s notorious prisons. She made a big song and dance of how the Zanu PF regime was ridding roughshod over the citizens denying them they basic freedoms and human rights including the right to free, fair and credible elections. She pretended to care about rigged elections but in reality she and her oppositions fiends did not give a damn!


Mahere had participated in the 2018 Zimbabwe elections and made it clear she and her CCC party were going to participate in the 2023 elections. They knew that Zanu PF was rigging and that participating would give the regime legitimacy. Still they have soldiered on because they also knew that Zanu PF was giving away a few gravy train seats to entice the opposition to participate no matter what. 


And so all the excellent work individuals like Mhlanga were doing to push Zanu PF to accept meaningful democratic changes was being undone by the men and women the nation had entrusted the political power to bring about the political changes the nation is dying for. 


Zimbabwe’s MDC/CCC opposition have not only sold out by failing to implement even one token reform in 26 years but have been conning the nation to participate in flawed elections to perpetuate the Zanu PF dictatorship out of selfish greed. Such treasonous betrayal by the ruling elite, first Zanu PF and now the MDC/CCC opposition, is Zimbabwe’s worst curse!

16 comments:

Zimbabwe Light said...

@ Issac

Mukanya worked with Mnangagwa in the 2008 Operation Mavhotera Papi, was ring leader in the 2017 military coup, was involved in the 2018 and 2023 rigged elections, etc., etc. The two have fallen out because Mnangagwa has reneged on the promise to step down and let Chiwenga take over - that is enough to make Mukanya squeaky clean!!!! This is the kind of mind numbing stupidity that makes the country a failed state!

Day in day out you keep bombarding the nation with your nauseating foolishness. Chiwenga is a typical Zanu PF thug, corrupt, incompetent and will just be another dictators if he even became president!

Zimbabwe Light said...

https://www.facebook.com/wilbert.mukori.5/videos/1108959261336977

Many Zimbabweans celebrated the November 2017 military coup as Independence Day, they were cocksure the coup marked the new beginning for the nation. Eight years down the line, few would deny the nation is in even worse peril now than during Mugabe's dictatorship.

Fighting to stop this Constitution Amendment No. 3 has generated the same euphoria and hope of fresh start as the 2017 military coup. Some people never learn!

The 2017 military coup accomplish nothing of substance because nothing had been done cure the nation of the curse of rigged elections and bad governance. Zanu PF has ring-fenced implementing democratic reforms especially ever since the regime successfully bribed MDC/CCC leaders stopping them implementing even one token reform.during the GNU.

There will never ever be any meaningful political and economic changes in Zimbabwe as long as reforms continue to be ring-fenced! Nothing!

Zimbabwe Light said...

Part 1 of 2

@ Mandaza

“Over the past decade, the Platform for Concerned Citizens (PCC) has continuously pointed out that the crisis in the political economy of the country requires more than another election, more than a forced transition within the ruling party, more than government of national unity, and argued that the country needs a thorough reset.

This suggestion gained traction in 2025 and seems even having support within the ruling party in the repeated statements of the Vice President and war veterans about the capture of the state by a corrupt elite.

In particular, the statements of the Vice President are remarkable in how little they have sparked concern within ZANU-PF or the government, when it is common cause right around the country that the nexus of corruption and politics is so palpably obvious. Chiwenga continues to keep silent, and doesn't bother to defend his claims, because he knows that he merely expressing what the entire nation knows to be true, as pointed out by Reason Wafawarova.

The government, however, continues with the rhetoric that all is well and the economy is recovering, but scarcely any citizen believes this, and have been critical of the government for nearly a decade. From 2017 to 2024, more than two-thirds believe the country is going in the wrong direction., more than two-thirds state that their living conditions are very bad ot fairly bad, few (13%) claim full-time employment, over half have gone with out cash income (always or many times).

Quite evidently, the Vice President is articulating the views of most Zimbabweans, and it is remarkable that this produces no response other than denial or attack.

This was the central point made by the PCC nearly a decade ago: the government had no possibility of serious reform, either politically or economically, and what was true in 2016 is still true in 2026. It has not even been able to take advantage of the soft landing offered by the Arrears Clearance and Debt Relief Process, providing minimal reforms under Economic Growth and Stability, stuck on Land Tenure Reforms, and failing wholesale on Governance Reforms: the rule of law and protection of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms remain weak and too frequently violated with impunity. Even constitutionalism is being challenged by the 2030 agenda, and hence it is unsurprising that Zimbabwe is deemed an Electoral Autocracy, and scores poorly on virtually every international indicator of democracy and governance.”

Zimbabwe Light said...

Part 2 of 2

@ Mandaza



This was the central point made by the PCC nearly a decade ago: the government had no possibility of serious reform, either politically or economically, and what was true in 2016 is still true in 2026. It has not even been able to take advantage of the soft landing offered by the Arrears Clearance and Debt Relief Process, providing minimal reforms under Economic Growth and Stability, stuck on Land Tenure Reforms, and failing wholesale on Governance Reforms: the rule of law and protection of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms remain weak and too frequently violated with impunity. Even constitutionalism is being challenged by the 2030 agenda, and hence it is unsurprising that Zimbabwe is deemed an Electoral Autocracy, and scores poorly on virtually every international indicator of democracy and governance.”

Chiwenga, Geza and many of the so called Zanu PF leaders who have spoken against Mnangagwa’s ED2030 Agenda have failed to gain any meaningful support from the thinking Zimbabweans because they spoke tongue-in-cheek. Only the fools believed Chiwenga was against corruption, rigged elections and would ever deliver meaningful democratic change because he is a thug through and through.

Chiwenga and Mnangagwa stood side by side in planning and executing Operation Mavhotera Papi in 2008. Chiwenga commanded the 2017 military coup and the two rigged the 2018 and 2023 elections. They have shared the spoils of power.

Chiwenga is up in arms against Mnangagwa because the latter has not honoured his promise to step down so he too can be the top dog. Any one who thinks that Chiwenga would not rig the next elections, for example, if he was the Zanu PF candidate is naive, to say the least.

Zanu PF would have been forced into a new GNU after both SADC and AU election observers condemned the 2023 elections as flawed and illegal. They did not do so because Chamisa conned millions to participate in the flawed elections. If millions of Zimbabweans are so naive and gullible to believe Chamisa’s idiotic lies then the nation is not ready for democracy.

Democracy demands that the people must be educated, knowledgeable, objective and diligent in carrying out their task of holding leaders to account. Many Zimbabweans have none of these qualities and it would have been pointless for SADC to foster a new GNU when it was clear no meaningful reforms would be implemented just as happened in the n2008 to 2013 GNU.

Like is or not, Zimbabwe is not ready for a democratic system of government. We have not suffered enough from the dysfunctional dictatorship to reject it - assuming we have the common sense to learn from the past!

Zimbabwe Light said...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m2_yWMjVrs4

“Morgan Tsvangirai is a flawed figure, not readily open to advice, indecisive and with questionable judgment, ... albatross around their necks once in power,” USA Ambassador Chris Dell, 2004 - 07. He said this in a cable meant for his principles back in Washington but was latter made public in the Wikileaks.

Time has proven the ambassador was right, Morgan Tsvangirai and his MDC/CCC fiends have turned out to be the proverbial albatross, milestone, around the nation's neck. The tragedy has been compounded even further by the failure of many Zimbabweans to MDC/CCC leaders as the corrupt, incompetent, liars and conmen they are even now with the benefit of hindsight!

Zimbabwe Light said...

https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1DxLdvdZvBLxm

Mnangagwa blatantly rigged the 2023 elections, he knew he would get away with it just as he has done countless times in the past. Indeed, he and his Zanu PF cronies believe they have the divine right to rule and, per se, to rig elections - the only way they can be certain of retaining their iron grip on power.

Rigging the elections for the parliamentary seats is relatively eace compared rigging the presidential ballot and this is the reason why Mnangagwa wants to push through amendment No. 3. Having rigged the elections, he has the arrogance to demand whatever else he wants.

In fighting to stop amendment No. 3 we, the people, have become the house owner forced to share his wealth with the thief who has become so cocky he believe he has the right to steal. In truth we should not be fighting Mnangagwa over amendment No. 3 but rather that he is illegitimate.

As long as Zanu PF thugs continue to deny us our fundamental right to a meaningful vote nothing will ever change. Whether the amendment sails through or not we will still have a dictator because Zanu PF will rig the next elections to guarantee the Zanu PF dictatorship. Whether its Mnangagwa or some one else who will be the dictator is academic!

OUR NO. 1 TASK IS TO CHALLENGE THE THIEF AND NOT TO BE NEGOTIATING WITH HIM WHAT HE WILL STEAL FROM US, ESPECIAL AFTER 46 YEARS OF APPEASING THE VOTE RIGGING THUGS!

Zimbabwe Light said...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hluZYFPozTQ

ASK YOURSELF WHAT WOULD BENEFIT ZIMBABWE MORE IMPLEMENTING REFORMS AND END CURSE OF RIGGED ELECTIONS OR STOPPING AMENDMENT NO. 3?

THEN ASK WHY IS TENDAI BITI TELLING US THAT HE WILL "DIE" IN THE FIGHT TO STOP MNANGAGWA PUSHING THROUGH AMENDMENT NO. 3 AND YET HE AND HIS MDC/CCC FIENDS HAVE FAILED TO IMPLEMENT EVEN ONE TOKEN DEMOCRATIC REFORMS IN 26 YEARS INCLUDING 5 GNU YEARS? OF COURSE, THIS IS ALL MAKE BELIEVE.

BITI & Co. WILL PARTICIPATE IN NEXT ELECTIONS TO GIVE ZANU PF LEGITIMACY REGARDLESS HOW FLAWED THE PROCESS GET, WHETHER OR NOT AMENDMENT No. 3 PASSED OR NOT! THEY ARE HYPOCRITES CONNING THE NATION FOR THEIR SHARE OF THE SPOILS OF POWER!

Zimbabwe Light said...

https://www.facebook.com/wilbert.mukori.5/videos/933253695919446

MUTAMBARA, YES MNANGAGWA IS A BUFFOON, HE WASTED THE OPPORTUNITY FOR CHANGE THAT 2017 MILITARY COUP OFFERED. STILL THIS WAS BUT A FLEETING MOMENT COMPARED TO THE ONCE IN A GENERATION 5 LONG YEARS OPPORTUNITY THE 2008 TO 2013 GNU PRESENTED. AND YOU AND YOUR MDC FIENDS, WASTED IT. THAT MAKES YOU WORSE INTELLECTUAL BUFFOON THAN MNANGAGWA!

IF ONLY WE CAN STOP MDC/CCC SELLOUTS CONNING MILLIONS OF THEIR BRAIN DEAD FOLLOWERS FROM PARTICIPATING TO GIVE ZANU PF LEGITIMACY WE CAN HAVE A SECOND GNU, A SECOND BITE AT THE CHERRY. AND IF WE ENSURE WE HAVE COMPETENT LEADERS THIS TIME, WE WILL GET THE REFORMS IMPLEMENTED AND FINALLY GET THE NATION ON A DEMOCRATIC FOOTING.

Zimbabwe Light said...

https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1RJjpzpapALKw

Zimbabwe elections have become "toxic" said Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi. True! What he did not say is that all the toxins and violence have come from the same quarter - Zanu PF. The truth is Zanu PF thugs believe that they have the divine right to rule the country and will do anything to safe guard that right. This is in stack contrast to the fundamental reality that Zanu PF is and has always ridden roughshod on the people denying them their freedoms and basic human rights.

LET IT BE STATED HERE THAT THE RIGHT OF THE ORDINARY ZIMBABWEAN'S RIGHT TO A MEANINGFUL SAY IN THE GOVERNANCE OF THE COUNTRY, ONE MAN ONE VOTE, IS NOT NEGOTIABLE!

IT SHOULD ALSO BE STATED THAT THIS AMENDMENT WOULD BE IRRELEVANT IF WE FIGHT FOR REFORMS AND FREE AND FAIR ELECTIONS!

Zimbabwe Light said...

@ Vivian Siziba

“What I note here is that there is passionate hatred for Biti, don't think that in the face of these monstrous efforts by the regime to mutilate the constitution people should take an unenviable task of trying to scuttle those noble initiatives of fighting the mutilation of the constitution.Should bear in mind that once this bill is passed into law, there would be no more talk of reforms.”

Has it ever occurred to you that if MDC leaders had implemented the reforms during the GNU, the Zanu PF dictatorship would bedded and buried by now?

If the nation stopped Zanu PF rigging the next elections and thus end the dictatorship there would be no Zanu PF dictator and whatever happened with amendment no. 3 will be academic.

Zimbabwe Light said...

@ Vivian Siziba

"Was it Biti's sole decision to participate in elections or a collective decision of the organisation??"

How tedious! So Biti cannot be held to account because it was an organisation decision.

Zimbabwe Light said...

@ Professor J Moyo

"Constitution of Zimbabwe (Amendment No. 3) Bill, 2026 seeks, inter alia, to lengthen the county's election cycle from five to seven years. It's a Sabbath initiative!"

Of all the Zanu PF excuses to justify changing the terms of office of the MPs and President, this is the most pathetic excuse. Those who were elected for a maximum term are now deciding to extend their stay in office without so much as by your leave.

We are now being told by the nutty professor that it is ok because it is "INTER ALIA" as if giving it the Latin name explains it all! Inter alia - my foot! Fcuk off!

Zimbabwe Light said...

@ Professor J Moyo

"Constitution of Zimbabwe (Amendment No. 3) Bill, 2026 seeks, inter alia, to lengthen the county's election cycle from five to seven years. It's a Sabbath initiative!"

Of all the Zanu PF excuses to justify changing the terms of office of the MPs and President, this is the most pathetic excuse. Those who were elected for a maximum term are now deciding to extend their stay in office without so much as by your leave.

We are now being told by the nutty professor that it is ok because it is "INTER ALIA" as if giving it the Latin name explains it all! Inter alia - my foot! Fcuk off!

Zimbabwe Light said...

@ Kang

MDC leaders had the golden opportunity to implement the reforms, which implemented would have ended the Zanu PF dictatorship. They sold out and must be held to account. That is not negotiable!

In a healthy democracy, leaders must be accountable to the people and it is the sacred duty of all citizen to hold leaders to account. Why should I need to have any other objective beyond that?

You do not want them to be held to account because you have a personality mentality. Leaders like Biti and Chamisa are demigod who can do no wrong. How anyone can be so shallow thick and slow beggars belief!

Zimbabwe Light said...

@ Chinomonamanu

Address the issues raised. Did the MDC leaders implement even one token reform when they had the chance to do so? No! So why is saying MDC leaders sold out on reforms being construed as “hating” them?

I will tell you why! We have millions of Zimbabweans out there with IQ of garden slugs, they believe leaders are demigods who can do no wrong. Even if they are confronted with the truth of their leaders’ failures they will ignore the facts just to hold on to their demigod illusion.

Worse still, the garden slugs expected every one else to subscribe to their idolatry! They fume and froth each time their demigod is called corrupt, incompetent, a liar and a conman!

Of course, I will never reduce myself to a garden slug just to please the nincompoops. Never! MDC leaders sold out that is a historic fact - you can fume and froth all you want I will contuse to say it because the nation must learn to accept the truth!!

Zimbabwe Light said...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCcv2_zieOo

Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi argues that the fight for independence was about land and NOT for "One man, one vote!" It is disappointing to hear him say it but then he is being brutal honest. Zanu PF has systematically denied the ordinary people a meaningful say in the governance of the country since independence in 1980.

Indeed, Zimbabwe is a failed state, a pariah state, precisely because the nation has been stuck with this corrupt, incompetent and tyrannical Zanu PF dictatorship for 46 years and counting. The regime has rigged elections all these years or be it the last 26 years with the connivence of the corrupt and incompetent MDC/CCC leaders.

Rigging elections and getting away with it has become tougher and tougher. Constitution Amendment No.3 is the regime's latest attempt to consolidate political power by eroding further the people's democratic right to free and fair elections.

It is tragic that 46 years after independence Zimbabweans should still be fighting for "One man, one vote!" And all because Zanu PF thugs believe they have the divine right to rule by virtue of conquest - they spear headed the liberation war. We have to end these curses of yesterday's liberators becoming today's oppressors!