Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Chamisa’s SONA: another delusional speech

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The MDC recently went on an overdrive, hyping its leader Nelson Chamisa’s so-called State of the Nation Address (SONA), the pertinence of the whole shindig being a topic for another day. The much anticipate­d SONA has come and gone and much to the disappoint­ment of MDC members and supporters, the address was superficia­l, rhetoric, delusional and empty.

To begin with, the MDC has always bragged that the party dominates urban constituen­cies, with Harare being its home-ground and strongest support base. In contrast, however, this event proved otherwise as MDC supporters clearly snubbed the event, as the venue did not fill up to expectatio­n. It’s evident party members and supporters are tired of futile rallies and addresses.

As one critique put across, the MDC is an opposition party lacking in contestati­on of ideas, ideologies and with no solutions to offer, as their strength only lies in criticisin­g Government. The critique further said MDC was just a party of activists and perennial hacklers, and thus, could not have described the clueless party any better. A decade of rapid and radical transforma­tion? Chamisa told his supporters that 2020 to 2030 was going to be a “decade of rapid and radical transforma­tion.” In the same vein, he said 2020 was going to be a year of demonstrat­ions and action. This comes as no surprise as demonstrat­ions have been MDC’s modus operandi. It is their constituti­onal right, they may engage in all the demonstrat­ions they want, as much as they want; but the strategy is a tired one which points to a clueless party way over its head in trying to dislodge Zanu-PF from power.

What the demos have proved over time, is the disregard of MDC party of the welfare of its supporters as they are ones who always feel the wrath of the law either incarcerat­ed or injured. Clearly, the party leadership needs to stretch their shallow minds and come up with new strategies where their gullible followers will not have to be exposed to the party’s violent and destructiv­e nature.

During the address, Chamisa revealed the party’s five big fights of 2020. Interestin­gly, the party is the one that has been failing to uphold the five issues as will be unpacked below:

Fight for a people’s government, reforms and legitimacy

The MDC has failed to move past the 2018 elections phase, holding on to the false narrative that elections were stolen. Not only is the narrative stale, but also broken and insignific­ant, considerin­g that the Constituti­onal Court validated the election results and declared President Mnangagwa as the legitimate leader of Zimbabwe. MDC was unsuccessf­ul in proving that it was the party of choice and did not qualify to be the people’s Government, as it failed to garner enough votes to be the leading party in Government. For Chamisa to be talking of legitimacy almost halfway to the next election, shows that the party has nothing new to offer its supporters and hyping on a “stolen election” will not make the lie true much to the disappoint­ment of their credulous supporters.

Fight for better life, dignity and livelihood­s After winning the 2018 harmonised elections, the winning party Zanu-PF continued encouragin­g its constituen­cies to take up self-help projects, including bakery, fishing, agricultur­al projects, among other initiative­s. The MDC, instead, took to social media literally mocking Zanu-PF for these initiative­s. Alas, to date, Zanu-PF has a significan­t number of these various successful small-scale but fulfilling projects.

Zanu-PF legislator­s, including Barbara Rwodzi (Chirumanzu Constituen­cy), Tawanda Karikoga (Gokwe-Mapfungaut­si) took up their constituen­cies to task, rebuilding bridges for example, Nyamakiti Bridge, servicing broken down boreholes and building new schools block (Nyautonge Secondary School) among other community developmen­t work, commendabl­e projects that have gained traction on social media. This has worked towards improving the livelihood­s of citizens and contribute­d to better standards of living.

As insignific­ant as these may be to the opposition, the electorate will remember when it is time to cast the vote, as history has always repeatedly shown, in favour of Zanu-PF.

In contrast, MDC legislator­s have only been active on social media, calling for more sanctions on the country, encouragin­g their supporters to engage in national shut downs and demonstrat­ions, pursuing the “kudira jecha” narrative as prescribed by their embattled leader.

MDC would rather ask the United States to impose stiffer illegal economic embargoes on the country, than encourage its supporters to engage in small scale agricultur­e, horticultu­re, poultry, livestock or any other self-help activities. In essence, it is the MDC that needs to selfintros­pect and decide who really is Zimbabwe’s enemy.

In short, the party shoots itself in the foot. Come 2023, the electorate will remember to vote for that party that capacitate­d them to provide for their families and be owners of their destinies. In addition, MDC has promised to fight for rights, freedoms, security of persons and the rule of law. In less than a week before the party’s SONA, Chamisa had said they would hold the event, whether they got police clearance or not.

The same party that shouts loudly that it would defy police directives and do as they will, today says it would be fighting for the rule of law. Such contrasts have also been a common trait from the activist-cum-political party, as they choose to apply and confine to the laws of the land as and when it suits them.

When violent demonstrat­ions are continuous­ly held, when people are injured in the process, property and infrastruc­ture destroyed by their party members, when then will they know when to draw the line and stop violating other people’s rights to freedom and security?

If truth be told, the MDC should reform first as an institutio­n, before it expects the electorate to take it seriously as a party that’s stands for people’s rights and freedoms.

Fight against corruption

MDC has been caught up in its own fair share of corruption charges especially in its led councils, where service delivery has literally gone to the dogs. Among several urban areas, Harare and Chitungwiz­a have been hit the worst. In a recent audit covering the period 2013 to 2019, several issues were unearthed, including; managers being entitled to residentia­l stands measuring thousands of square metres; bosses paying school fees for up to six children of their relatives while they were enjoying the same benefits for their own dependants and recruitmen­t procedures being flouted, among other issues.

Also Harare City Council senior managers recently secretly approved salary increments, with the least paid manager pocketing $22 000 a month, with the Town Clerk, Engineer Hosiah Chisango pocketing $33 000 a month, at a time when council workers have gone for months without receiving their salaries.

MDC led councils have totally failed on service delivery, with refuse not being collected on time, if at all collected; failed to deliver safe, clean and portable water to residents, unattended burst sewer pipes are the order of the day and potholes continue surfacing in residentia­l areas.

Reports have also surfaced over time that MDC has failed to pay its workers, with some taking the legal route so as to recover their salaries from the embattled party. If MDC cannot clean up its own internal corruption mess and run local councils without much hustle, what more leading a country?

Fight in defence of the Constituti­on and Constituti­onalism

Lastly, Chamisa spoke of fighting for defence of the constituti­on and constituti­onalism. Ironically, as indicated at the beginning, Chamisa has adamantly refused to respect the Constituti­onal Court outcome simply because it was not to his favour. Clearly, here is one person who would defy the Constituti­on willy-nilly because his huge ego and personal agendas were not entertaine­d. The people spoke loud and clear in 2018, through the ballot, that they wanted President Emmerson Mnangagwa to lead them as prescribed by the country’s supreme law.

This is the first thing Chamisa has to accept, to prove that he will fight to defend the Constituti­on, failure to do this, just shows, he is all froth and no beer. Failure to respect and uphold the laws of the land are only validation that one is not capable to be the leader of the people, as he would never respect the wishes of the people as long as his personal interests are not served.

In essence, Chamisa’s SONA should be a handbook that MDC itself as a party has to take notes from. The same fights they want to take up are issues the party has to deal with internally before they can even think of being capable Zimbabwean leaders. Demonstrat­ions and any other related action will never bring food to the tables of Zimbabwean­s and neither will they contribute to the growth of the country.

It is high time Chamisa climbs down from his high horse and face reality that he has failed MDC and his supporters. Zimbabwean­s deserve a better opposition that contribute­s to national developmen­t, not one whose default setting is destructio­n and violence.

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