The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mnangagwa’s masterstro­ke

APPOINTMEN­TS: FORMER SWIMMER KIRSTY COVENTRY, EX-FOOTBALLER BRUCE GROBBELAAR

- Tapiwa Chagonda

Zimbabwe president attemps to mend relations with white community.

Sport in general, and particular­ly gifted sports people, have been known to rouse feelings of national unity. In the process, they instil a sense of patriotism and pride in their countries.

Good examples include George Weah, the soccer legend from Liberia, now the president of his country, and Imran Khan, the cricketing star from Pakistan, now its prime minister.

Notable sports figures have managed, to some extent, to unify their troubled nations. In the process they have shown how powerful a force sport can be.

This salient observatio­n has not escaped Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

In a bid to restore the badly damaged relations between the governing Zanu-PF party and the country’s white community both inside and outside Zimbabwe, Mnangagwa has appointed former swimming sensation Kirsty Coventry as minister of youth, sport, arts and recreation.

The 35 year old is a seven time Olympic medallist. She is the only African to break the one-minute barrier in the women’s 100m backstroke. She also has the highest number of individual Olympic medals of all female swimmers in history.

But Coventry’s appointmen­t is not where Mnangagwa ended. He also reached out to the flamboyant footballer Bruce Grobbelaar, the former goalkeeper for the Zimbabwean national football team as well as British club Liverpool, whose nickname is “Jungleman”. In an interview, Grobbelaar described Mnangagwa’s call, with the president saying: “Hello, Jungleman, how are you?”

By wooing Coventry and Grobbelaar, Mnangagwa is clearly hoping to achieve a number of outcomes. The first is that he is hoping to repair the damaged relations between Zanu-PF and Zimbabwe’s white community.

As a long shot, he might also be hoping this will help normalise relations with the West which could, in turn, unblock much-needed foreign direct investment.

Working with the hugely popular Coventry and equally liked Grobbelaar could also lure the young urban electorate back to Zanu-PF. They left the party in droves for the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) when it was launched in 1999.

When Zimbabwe gained independen­ce in 1980, the country’s population stood at just over seven million people. The white population was around 230 000.

This began to decline steadily as white Zimbabwean­s began to emigrate to countries such as South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. The exodus increased significan­tly after 2000, when the Zanu-PF government began embarking on violent land grabs that resulted in Zimbabwe’s economy going into meltdown.

The last census, in 2012, put the number of white Zimbabwean­s at 28 000. This community has been very active and is still, to a limited extent, influentia­l, in sectors such as agricultur­e, mining and manufactur­ing. Whites have also traditiona­lly been active in sports such as cricket, rugby and swimming.

Zanu-PF’s fractured relationsh­ip with the white community dates back to Robert Mugabe’s rule. He presided over the breakdown in relations when he began implementi­ng a land reform programme that ended up benefittin­g Zanu-PF members and chiefs.

But relations hadn’t always been bad between the party and white Zimbabwean­s. At the advent of independen­ce, Mugabe famously pleaded with the white community: stay with us, please remain in this country and constitute a nation based on national unity.

And in 1980 Mugabe retained white Zimbabwean­s such as Ken Flower. Flower had been in charge of Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith’s intelligen­ce services. Mugabe also appointed white ministers like Dennis Norman (agricultur­e) and advocate Chris Andersen (mines) to his first Cabinet.

But this rosy relationsh­ip turned sour in 1999 when the white community rejected a draft national constituti­on that included a clause on redistribu­ting the country’s most fertile land – the bulk of which was in the hands of around 4 000 white farmers – without compensati­on.

This set the scene for violent land seizures. This resulted in sanctions being imposed on Zimbabwe by a number of Western nations. These only served to harden Mugabe’s resolve towards the white farmers.

In the intervenin­g years, Zimbabwe’s political and economic landscapes have continued to deteriorat­e as the country became a pariah state and a basket case. This was largely because of the punishing ramificati­ons of the sanctions and the corruption and ineptitude of the Mugabe regime.

Zimbabwe’s economic crisis reached its peak in 2008 when inflation reached 231 million percent, officially, even though leading experts such as Steve Hanke estimate that the country’s inflation rate far exceeded that.

For his part, Mnangagwa has always cultivated good relations with white Zimbabwean­s. This goes back to the 1980s when he had cordial working relationsh­ips with people like Flower.

In later years, Mnangagwa has been linked to a number of white business people in some of his business ventures.

In mending the relations with the white community by roping in Coventry and Grobbelaar, Mnangagwa might just have pulled off a masterstro­ke. He must be hoping it will eventually help extricate Zimbabwe from its economic quagmire.

Tapiwa Chagonda, Associate Professor of Sociology, UJ

Republishe­d from TheConvers­ation.com

It could lure back the young urban electorate

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