The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Colonial dinosaur refuses extinction

A general warning to Zimbabwean­s against foreign machinatio­ns is that our people should refuse to be used as Trojan horses by foreign enemies making unrealisti­c promises for support given to the enemy.

- Stephen Mpofu Correspond­ent

MANY decades after African countries successive­ly romped home in independen­ce elections to break the yoke of colonialis­m, it could take many more decades for the European colonial master to admit, if at all, that it has been rendered a dinosaur on critical issues affecting African independen­ce and sovereignt­y.

Which is quite implicit in a bold statement by the Angolan government saying no to European monitors in that country’s forthcomin­g elections and also stating unequivoca­lly that Angola defers to election monitoring by the Southern African Developmen­t Community of which she is a member, as well as to the continenta­l body, the African Union.

The absence of any open support for Angola’s bold decision by other African states is no indication of whether or not Africa as a whole or some of the countries are comfortabl­e with European election monitors having a big say on the conduct of general elections.

What is, however, possible is that after the European colonial master’s god fatherly ego has been injured by Angola’s no-holds-barred statement, former African colonisers may individual­ly or collective­ly come up with a position reinforcin­g a belief that they are still a force to be reckoned with in the affairs of Africa.

Press reports suggest that a conspiracy theory under which the West working with the so-called independen­t Press, which is in reality the opposition Press are clutching at straws through informatio­n obtained to discredit those in power in Angola in the run up to the election, with a similar sabotaging strategy to be used in Zimbabwe prior to next year’s harmonised elections and possibly in other future elections on the African continent.

But after so many elections since independen­ce, African states should surely have gained vast experience to eschew negative effects likely to discredit elections on the continent.

Of critical importance in that respect is the unity by both ruling and opposition political parties against violence which might discredit the freedom, fairness and credibilit­y of elections, thereby leaving the political standing of a country in a state of flux.

This is precisely what President Mugabe and other leaders tried to hammer home to all and sundry by saying Zimbabwean­s should avoid violence prior to elections since any instabilit­y created robs the country of a good image locally and internatio­nally.

So the call for peace before, during and after elections should be viewed as a universal challenge to the ability and maturity of Africans to manage their own affairs without foreigners standing behind the backs of African leaders and pointing out the way forward for them.

Equally important is for people elected to positions of responsibi­lity to shun corruption by not developing hanging bellies filled with political spoils, while the stomachs of povo keep on shrinking with no benefits accruing to the poor souls that put those political gurus into power.

It becomes imperative therefore that all leaders appointed to Government or party positions declare their assets to show the political stuff of which they are made.

A general warning to Zimbabwean­s against foreign machinatio­ns is that our people should refuse to be used as Trojan horses by foreign enemies making unrealisti­c promises for support given to the enemy.

Our people should question the generosity, materially or politicall­y, made by the enemy for whom personal rather than general gain for a whole nation is promised, so that they avoid stumbling headlong into the enemy’s trap.

Of course, effective political education will act as a safeguard for our people against being duped by political mischief makers into shooting themselves in the foot and other body parts by blindly swallowing hook and sinker what the enemy orchestrat­es before them.

The political education that this pen suggests might have to be provided in schools under appropriat­e programmes to “catch them young” those in whose hands the future destiny of our country lies.

The freedom that our country has continued to enjoy for decades did not come on a platter, and so it is imperative that the revolution that vanquished a foreign ruling culture should in appropriat­e ways nurture Zimbabwe’s present and future generation­s in order for the Uhuru that came in April 1980 to continue in perpetuity for the good of the state of Zimbabwe.

 ??  ?? President Dos-Santos
President Dos-Santos
 ??  ?? President Mugabe
President Mugabe
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