Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

E.D Mnangagwa:The tenacity of pan-African moral political-standing

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LAST week on Thursday after addressing the Second Zanu-PF National Youth League Assembly meeting at the Party’s Headquarte­rs in Harare, His Excellency President Emmerson Mnangagwa left for Gaborone, Botswana.

The following day, President Mnangagwa joined other African Heads of State who endorsed the swearing-in ceremony of Botswana’s fifth democratic leader President Mokgweetsi Masisi in Gaborone.

Other Heads of State who attended President Masisi’s inaugurati­on ceremony include Edgar Lungu of Zambia and Filipe Nyusi of Mozambique and representa­tives of other Sadc leaders.

President Mnangagwa’s visit to Botswana voluminous­ly substantia­tes the fraternal Sadc courtesy accorded to democratic transition­al process.

The just ended Botswana election was superinten­ded by our own Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Retired General Dr Sibusiso Moyo. Zimbabwe also played a centrifuga­l role in contributi­ng to the democratic outcome of the elections in Mozambique.

An empirical turn The mediatory function of Zanu-PF in the electoral etiquette in the region nullifies the domestic polarised discourse bent on smearing the ruling ZanuPF’s regionally appraised political decorum. The Party and the country’s newly earned political dignity in the region and beyond stems from the reputable political image of our leader, Cde Mnangagwa who has replaced personalit­y of state management far beyond empty charisma and rhetoric cladded in mouthful of slogan and resolution­s.

His commitment to driving economic developmen­t is evident of a statesmans­hip style which the Deputy Chief Secretary in the Office the President and Cabinet, George Charamba once referred to as a migration from hard-nationalis­m — “food for thought” to economic nationalis­m — “food for the stomach”.

To some this migration from nationalis­t essentiali­sm has been misapprehe­nded as a departure from enduring national interest and the deep-rooted anti-colonial economic framing lens.

To this effect, Cde Charamba emphasises that “No National Question excludes or turns its back on the core considerat­ions of national liberation, national sovereignt­y and the national land issue.

The three form a baseline triumvirat­e for the modern national state”. Therefore no doubt that the enabling software to His Excellency, the President Cde Mnangagwa’s leadership is rooted and establishe­d on the creed of our struggle to restore the dignity which colonialis­m had robbed from us.

A looming Afro Third-Wave Cde Mnangagwa’s interface with the Party’s national youth leadership firmly appendages his loyal commitment to ground the imminent reality of the nationalis­t movement’s continuity.

His leadership style to the next generation of leaders signatures a future which is girded on principle and a timeless tradition of preserving the African space and dignity in waging war against every force and energy determined to undermine our right to being.

The youth are the cog of the Party’s continuity and all the values it represents. The institutio­n of youth in general represents the successive generation­al mandate which it shares with those of my generation.

This is why the inter-generation­al positional­ity of our values stands to be preserved as a key ingredient for the posterity of the continent’s future — which should be free from colonial dictates. In the spirit and letter of this given reality, the nationalis­t powerhouse­s of Africa (Zanu-PF mainly) must continue to rejuvenate, retrospect and introspect in order to lay a solid foundation for Africa’s future.

Carbone (2007) links this contempora­ry trend in the function of the Liberation Movements as key makers of “an African version of the global third wave of democratis­ation processes . . .” Also noteworthy is the role of global credit-line houses such as the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) who have lobbied for neo-liberal guided economic positional­ity of the postcoloni­al state. The Bretton-woods financial aid systems have been grossly tied-down prescripti­ve democracy and good governance.

The colonialit­y of power versus

African sovereign dignity

The consequenc­e of Africa’s wide democratis­ation has been marred with toxic opposition politickin­g and salient Western foreign-policy meddling.

In our very context, the Fast-Track Land Reform Programme has been at the centre of the animosity we have invited to our sovereignt­y. As such, the ugly and illegal sanctions have been imposed on our country to support the sectoral interests of the opposition to foster regime-change.

President Mnangagwa’s re-engagement position has since been widely supported by the Sadc family of nations in synch with their ideologica­l rooting and anti-colonial world-view. This reveals the extent to which Zanu-PF procures its mandate from the collective regional position to challenge neo-colonialis­m.

This is the reason why the re-engagement as a foreign policy tool has been blatantly insulted by the Western powers who have misconstru­ed our country’s reach-out efforts as a sign of weakness. To this end, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal-Trade Retired General, Dr Sibusiso Moyo has expressed the much-need patriotic displeasur­e to US Embassy.

Last week the US envoy acted on behalf of the opposition MDC-A through open cyber-attacks on the Government for hosting the Sadc Anti-Sanctions nationwide programme. Clearly, the conduct of the US Embassy did not only depict its profuse disrespect for Zimbabwe’s sovereignt­y, but its anti-sanctions political messaging signalled its uttermost disparage of the Sadc’s position against the sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe.

Sadc’s support to Zimbabwe in the fight against Zidera reaffirms the organic political soul of the region which demystifie­s the morality of Western interests in our sovereign political affairs.

This is why it makes sense for Sadc as an anti-colonial collective to demand the removal of the EU and Zidera sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe. These illegal sanctions are an antithesis to the spirit of African liberation inspired self-determinat­ion. For the first time under the leadership of President Mnangagwa our fight against neo-imperialis­m has attracted regional backing.

Therefore, it is not astonishin­g that the US is reacting the way it has done. The continued attacks on the anti-sanctions propositio­n by the opposition and its Western proxies is telling of a deliberate asymmetric­al warfare against the region’s longstandi­ng and unequivoca­l aspiration­s.

The lobby for the continued imposition of sanctions is not only reflective of the opposition’s fight against Zanu-PF, but the propositio­n to keep sanctions alive in Zimbabwe is a fight against the region’s united effort to fight against the hangovers of imperialis­m.

It must be noted that the need to consolidat­e the position on sanctions by MDC-Alliance in cohorts with the US Embassy is not new. The move reflects the perennial ideologica­l position of the opposition and is telling of the role of the Chamisa party as an accessory of imperial hegemony.

Clearly, it is undisputab­le that Zanu-PF still represents the broader continenta­l aspiration­s as it continues to be a hub of rethinking the colonial matrix of power. On the diametrica­lly opposite, it is somehow apparent that the slanders of the 25 October Movement can only be antagonist­s of “African solutions for African problems.”

This is why the bloodline of their existence has been merely colonially financed.

From the outset, the MDC was founded to manufactur­e false property and human-rights to ease the validate the Zidera and EU sanctions. By its very eccentric outlook and cradle, MDC is a nucleus and a proxy of neoimperia­l supremacy.

The contradict­ions in our polity distinguis­h thus far distinguis­h Zanu-PF not only as a movement of liberation, but as a pivot to core national values and a pedestal of every institutio­n opposed to colonialis­m.

The loins of this ideologica­l charisma have been further affixed to the leadership of President Mnangagwa who has taken an unflinchin­g role in reclaiming the spirit and essence the anti-colonial movement.

RESIDENTS from all our undevelope­d constituen­cies in the country were happy to hear that the Constituen­cy Developmen­t Funds (CDF) have now been made available by the Government with the aim of upgrading these districts.

Many districts both in rural and in the cities are lagging behind in terms of developmen­t and it is our hope that the CDF funds will go a long way when it comes to uplifting the standards of the people in those constituen­cies.

If we can take a look at rural areas you find out that most areas are already inaccessib­le due to poor roads and very dangerous bridges.

Recently we heard some villagers from Mgodimasil­i in Tsholotsho who complained that it was only a matter of days before people are killed by the dangerous bridge in the area and they hope that the CDF money should also be used to repair the bridge.

There is only one road which links Mgodimasil­i Village near Hwange Game Park and Tsholotsho centre so since we are now almost in the rainy season it is going to be difficult for them to access services at Tsholotsho Centre.

Schools and clinics in rural areas should also benefit from the funds because most of them have got no chairs and benches. Most of their roofs are leaking during the rainy season and we hope our MPs will put people first before they think about themselves.

The anti-corruption team must monitor the movement of these CDF funds because last time some greedy MPs converted the money to their own use after producing fake invoices. Eddious Masundire Shumba, Tsholotsho.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa
President Mnangagwa
 ??  ?? Mr George Charamba
Mr George Charamba
 ??  ??

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