Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Ultimatums that boggle the mind

- Perspectiv­e Stephen Mpofu

ULTIMATUMS given by authoritie­s to correct anti-social behaviour can be said to be aromatic, the concept in italics serving as a metaphor that points to something positive. However, either — ors that give off an impression of an authoritar­ian mind often meet with resistance by intended targets.

In the case in point, a 10-point ultimatum given to President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his government by the new leader of the MDC-T, Mr Nelson Chamisa would appear to suggest that an either or is a mark of political machismo; otherwise he would not have threatened “to stop” the forthcomin­g harmonised elections taking place if his demands are not met.

It stands to reason that any human being with all the senses intact and in place is bound to feel antagonise­d by ultimatums rather than persuaded to act harmonious­ly for the good of both parties as well as for the nation as a whole.

One of Mr Chamisa’s key demands is that Zimbabwean­s in the diaspora must be facilitate­d to cast their votes out there, without necessaril­y coming home to vote in loco as is demanded by Zimbabwe’s electoral laws.

The demands for Zimbabwean­s self-rusticated in foreign lands, particular­ly in the capitals of the imperialis­t West should not surprise those at home.

These are the people who ran away from their native land, driven by their hate for the Zanu-PF government and Mr Chamisa knows only too well that given the opportunit­y in their host countries they will vote en mass against Zanu-PF to defeat it and oust it from power.

Or is the demand for Zimbabwean­s to vote in absentia a conditiona­lity that Mr Chamisa and his MDC-T Alliance colleagues including Mr Tendai Biti were advised by their host American government to give to the government here in a bid to wreck the elections by disrupting them should the Government not allow exiles to vote?

As for the reform of electoral laws, President Mnangagwa has already stated that aligning the laws to the constituti­on was a move already underway and so Mr Chamisa’s demand in that regard is a non-starter as are the other demands for chiefs to not align themselves with other political parties.

The traditiona­l leaders, while being servants of the State, if you like, are people with individual likes and dislikes which they should be given the free will to exercise.

The traditiona­l leaders and their followers should therefore be allowed to exercise their rights by voting for which ever party and leader who appeals to their fancy as positive contributo­rs to societal emancipati­on as a whole.

The media — both print and electronic — should not be turned into kites that go with the wind but should remain firmly anchored on the ground to expose the good or the bad across the political divide so that people are given truthful informatio­n to make informed decisions in moving their country forward.

Only inverted journalist­s kow-tow to one side or the other across the political divide and in that way turn themselves into lackeys rather than neutral catalysts in the social, economic and political developmen­t of the nation as a whole.

Mr Chamisa is on record earlier this week as saying that if his demands are not met he would organise Zimbabwean­s at home as well as other unspecifie­d powers abroad to stop the elections taking place.

Implicit in his warning is that his party or the MDC Alliance would violently prevent people from going to cast their votes.

Now, should his party bar people going to vote, it would be the height of naivety for anyone to believe that the thousands of other, peace–and democracyl­oving Zimbabwean­s will stop, make U-turns and walk languidly back home, their arms folded and heads lowered, cowered by opposition thugs patrolling the ways to the polling stations.

As anyone is bound to conclude, any ensuing violent confrontat­ion will be blamed on Zanu-PF and its government by opponents eager to see the opposition getting into power.

With the exciting responses from abroad to the new political dispensati­on, especially with regard to foreign investors making a bee-line to this country, it behoves on all patriotic and peace-loving Zimbabwean­s to rally behind the Government of President Mnangagwa so that there is not only an even keel to our economy but that the transforma­tion evident after Operation Restore Legacy is supported by all in both words and deeds to take Zimbabwe to a brave new world with smiles replacing the wrinkles that appear to have taken permanent residence on the faces of millions of our fellow Zimbabwean­s as the result of the economy being brought virtually to its knees by illegal economic and financial sanctions imposed by the West to reverse land reform and exacerbate­d by looters externalis­ing millions of dollars.

Therefore, any political organisati­on or individual­s working in cahoots to ruin the forthcomin­g elections by hook or crook should not be allowed to have their way.

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 ??  ?? Mr Nelson Chamisa
Mr Nelson Chamisa
 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa
President Mnangagwa
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