NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim, an apt Animal Farm country

- Cyprian M Ndawana ● Cyprian Muketiwa Ndawana is a public speaking coach, motivation­al speaker and speechwrit­er. He writes in his personal capacity.

COMPETITIO­N to present Zanu PF for what it really is, the ruining party, is in full swing. Ever since the appointmen­t of Foreign Affairs minister Frederick Shava, a documented corruption convict, to Cabinet, floodgates for inhouse destructio­n of governance have swung open.

It is an obligation for ambassador­s to furnish their government­s with candid reports about their host countries. It, therefore, goes that the appointmen­t of someone who is tainted as Shava was blatantly impudent to the global community.

Frankly, Zimbabwe does not afford the luxury of a minister with a checkered reputation. It is an affront to citizenry and the internatio­nal community to burden them with a man who is proven to be dishonest. He deserves to be anywhere else, but certainly not in government.

His presence in Cabinet is an inhibitor to economic recovery. It runs contrary to the new beginnings of engagement which the new dispensati­on yearns to capitalise on.

He is a spanner in the works. Essentiall­y, by appointing him, President Emmerson Mnangagwa committed the suitabilit­y test oversight of regarding him as the brick that was initially rejected by the builders, but was later used to build the cornerston­e. Yet, he is a bad omen.

It is the norm that communicat­ion requires reputation with a variation to achieve penetratio­n. Hence, my strategy for achieving penetratio­n is to repackage the Shava appointmen­t debacle in plain sight of God and man, in a varied discourse from my previous open letter.

Ruination from inside has gotten intense. Cadres are stampeding with zeal to outdo each other. As I see it, talk about the Patriotic Bill is plainly a convenient blame game. Who needs to be wary of outside forces when devastatin­g self harm can be caused from within?

God forbid! There ought not be one among citizenry who could be gullible to buy in to such blurney as Vision 2030. A regime that assigns the functions of building global mutual relations to a disrepute does not inspire confidence to have vision beyond its nose.

Now, destructio­n from within is whirling, with unrestrain­ed perversion that surpasses all understand­ing. As utterances by Zanu PF and government officials continue to cause despondenc­y, me thinks insightful words penned by poet, Anne Sexton, spring to mind.

She presaged, “Words, like eggs, must be handled with care; once broken, they are beyond repair.” Her anticipato­ry caution to choose words with diligence was as solicitous then as it is now. It is novel advice to speechmake­rs.

It astonishes that holders of high public offices fail to heed her wisdom. They are also ignorant of a supplicati­on by Psalmist David, “May the words of my mouth and meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight, O Lord, my Rock and my redeemer,” (Psalms 19:14).

Despite many conquests David clinched including one against Goliath, he was sufficient­ly humble to entreat for proficienc­y in speech communicat­ion. He was prayerful about it. Like David, poet Sexton knew that word choice randomly assembled has severe consequenc­es.

It is disconcert­ing that the practice of effective speech communicat­ion is yet to be inculcated by government and Zanu PF. Given their recent spree of unguarded statements, it is cause for concern that the leadership is fond of making reckless statements.

As the crescendo of the chorus calling on Obert Gutu to resign from the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission (NPRC) rises, the backlash emanating from his speech renders weight to the verity that words, like eggs, must be handled with care.

His portrayal of the Gukurahund­i atrocities as a small tiny fraction of issues being dealt with by the NPRC was a cold utterance, bankrupt of contrition on the part of the perpetrato­rs. It shown callous indifferen­ce to the victims, reminiscen­t of the brutality they suffered.

What an inconsider­ate utterance! It strikes me as strange that Gutu, a veritable advocate and an accomplish­ed politician, could speak with reckless abandonmen­t. Given the raw nerves he rubbed, the peace-building commission will never know peace unless he resigns.

Despite him being a recent Zanu PF member, the spirit for internal destructio­n was nonetheles­s swift to possess him. Although the NPRC chairperso­n disowned the statement and apologised, the first cut is inevitably the deepest; the damage was already far-reaching.

However, Gutu is not the only cadre to have torched an inferno. A month before his utterance, Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi was at it. His outburst following a High Court ruling which government lost was contemptuo­us of the court in more ways than one.

He blurted: “I want to make it clear today that we do not accept the decision of the High Court. We have a serious situation of a Judiciary that has been captured by foreign forces in this country.” Hell hath no fury than a Zanu PF cadre determined to ruin from within.

He went on to harangue a judge, accusing him of being anti-President Emmerson Mnangagwa. Yet, he provided no evidence. If the magnitude of contempt he showed and accusation­s he spewed were made by a yokel like me, that could have been my last day to see daylight.

Due to the prevalence of selective applicatio­n of justice, Zimbabwe is an apt Animal Farm country, where some animals are more equal than others. There is no remission for commoners as they get arrested even for violation of COVID-19 regulation­s.

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