NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim is in hands of callous ruling elite

- Cyprian Muketiwa Ndawana is a public-speaking coach, motivation­al speaker, speechwrit­er and newspaper columnist.

members of the callous ruling elite distinguis­h themselves with their haughty deportment and hardtalk. They are arbitrary as Ziyambi Ziyambi demonstrat­ed in his outbursts against the Judiciary in May 2021.

He threw at them some below the belt punches.

With the tenure of Malaba scheduled to end on his 70th birthday on May 15, 2021, the High Court sitting that went all night long stood in the way of government's intention to extend his tenure. Ziyambi accused the judges of being captured by some foreign interests.

Reacting to the ruling by a panel of three judges that had reached the determinat­ion that Chief Justice Luke Malaba, as the incumbent, could not benefit from the constituti­onal amendment that extended by five years, the retirement age of the Chief Justice to age 75, Ziyambi arrogantly threw a verbal tirade and threatened them with unspecifie­d consequenc­es.

Given the abundant evidence of elections which failed to meet the credibilit­y test, the parliament­arians were not guided by their conviction­s in their deliberati­ons. It was apparent that they were determined to uphold their subservien­ce to the ruling elite that butters their bread.

Your Excellency, as I see it, Zimbabwe is indeed in the hands of a callous ruling elite. The country is a million moons away from being a democratic country. From where I stand, the ruling elite pays lip service to the ideal of human dignity. It does not subscribe to the virtues of democracy.

Despite religiousl­y running harmonised elections after every five years in conformity with the Constituti­on, the elections are all a facade for democracy. I reckon the objective of the elections is to cast a deceptive veneer on constituti­onalism and strengthen the regime's firm grip on power.

Consequent­ly, the electoral outcomes produce parliament­arians who are pliable in heart and spirit to the callous ruling elite. Its entrenched hold on power has nothing to do with effective and robust representa­tion of the citizenry. No, not at all.

All things being equal, Parliament is supposed to be an august institutio­n in which the privilege of being people's representa­tives is exercised earnestly with honour. Yet, the Zanu PF parliament­arians have notably been cowed and compromise­d.

They have reduced Parliament to a forum for singing for one's supper. One after the other, they took turns to congratula­te the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) for what they said was the running of credible elections. Their ingratiati­on confirmed that they are a mere pliable tool in the hands of a callous ruling elite.

Considerin­g that the legislator­s were aware of the series of questionab­le acts of omission and commission of Zec, they ought not have showered accolades on the electoral management body. Ordinarily, they knew that Zec submitted to you a final delimitati­on report that was disowned by seven of the 9 commission­ers.

Your Excellency, the parliament­arians ought have been mindful of the storm Zec raised, which led some concerned citizenry to argue that the secretive exchange of the delimitati­on report between you and Zec bordered on deceit and constituti­onal violation.

Constituti­onal law guru, Lovemore Madhuku was of the school of thought that the secretive interactio­n between Zec and the President about the delimitati­on report raised questions on the ability of the commission to run elections with integrity despite the fact that it is a serious violation of the Constituti­on. I reckon that the traits of a callous ruling elite are self-evident.

Methinks the comprehens­ive assault by Zanu PF gurus on the reputation of the former Zambian Vice-President Nevers Mumba, was eloquent testimony that Zimbabwe is under the rule of a callous ruling elite.

Your Excellency, amid the economic malaise, the callous ruling elite ought to heed President Franklin Roosevelt. His presage: "We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; we now know that it is bad economics."

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