The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zimbabwe: Looking into the future

It is now easier for ZANU-PF to protect into perpetuity the great name of Cde Mugabe, without having to worry about protecting the legacy and survival of the party itself in the same vein. The Mugabe legacy is safe and sound. Our dramatic internal process

- Reason Wafawarova on Monday

OUR past is rich in history; the sacred sacrifices made by the founding fathers of this nation alongside many sons and daughters who perished for our freedom can never be overlooked.

From the early days of the Samukange nationalis­m in the 1930s, moving on to the days of heroes like Benjamin Burombo, Samuel Parirenyat­wa, Ndabaningi Sithole, Joshua Nkomo, Herbert Chitepo; all the way to the heroic era of Robert Mugabe; we have a proud national narrative for posterity, a rich history to cherish, and a strong foundation for the future of this country.

As a nation we must and we will learn to live above our errors, above our shortcomin­gs, and above our weaknesses.

Our strength and unity is in our success story, not in the downside of our journey.

We are as proud as the Jewish nation, always cherishing our glory above our gloom.

Much as the last days of the presidency of Cde Robert Mugabe were punctuated by dramatised episodes of questionab­le behaviour by those who surrounded him; the undeniable truth is that the person and character of Robert Mugabe will go down in history as that of an iconic figure of principle, resilience, independen­t nationalis­m, and passion for black empowermen­t across the continent of Africa.

In the same vein, the role of people like Ndabaningi Sithole as the founder of Zanu in 1963 cannot be eroded by the difference­s that saw the man’s political downfall.

In nation-building the positive will always outweigh the negative.

In politics we always hail downfall over successes.

Politics is a mere means to an end. The end is nation building.

There was always going to be a Mugabe way of leaving, and that way was never going to be the Nujoma way, the Kaunda way, the Mandela way, or the Machel way.

We hoped it would be a way in honour of the revolution for which Cde Mugabe stood firm in defence for all his life.

The revolution was firmly defended by his younger comrades, and Zanu-PF has been re-united, rejuvenate­d, and re-energised for the future of our beloved country.

It is now easier for ZANU-PF to protect into perpetuity the great name of Cde Mugabe, without having to worry about protecting the legacy and survival of the party itself in the same vein.

The Mugabe legacy is safe and sound. Our dramatic internal processes can only strengthen it, and will never weaken it.

Professor Jonathan Moyo had hatched a deadly plan that was designed to demise Zanu-PF in the name of protecting the legacy of Cde Mugabe and his family.

Never once did Moyo say anything about protecting the revolution itself.

He was never a subscriber right from the time of the liberation struggle. Just an intruder.

He had managed to rally and frogmarch thousands of youths and women within Zanu-PF behind the mantra that said the one and only way to get into the Zanu-PF Kingdom was through a chosen intermedia­ry, whom Jonathan Moyo and his cronies said was none other than Cde Mugabe’s wife.

Just as much as Jesus said he was the way, the truth and the life, Jonathan Moyo through his “Munhu wese kunaAmai” slogan was telling party faithfuls that Grace Mugabe was the only begotten wife of President Mugabe, given and sacrificed as the messianic divine figure to ensure membership to eternity within Zanu-PF.

No doubt Jonathan Moyo did not admire the former first lady at all, did not think she was anything more than a pawn in his greater plan of bringing Zanu-PF down.

In her, Moyo saw a pliant tool for the ultimate demise of the party he so much loathes.

It is hard to understand why Moyo and his cronies like Saviour Kasukuwere and Patrick Zhuwao actually thought they could hand over a Zanu-PF without war veterans and the ZDF to Grace Mugabe, after which they could easily snatch the same party away from the pliant and excited lady.

That was never going to be allowed to happen.

Moyo and cronies were allowed to get exactly where the real owners of this party wanted them to be, and at the right time the scheme was blasted into smithereen­s on that fateful night of November 14.

The gun has always protected the politics of Zanu-PF, and this case was no different.

The transition­al set up we have in Zimbabwe now is in defence of the revolution, never in attack of Cde Mugabe, or even the demised G40.

I am positive the veteran iconic politician understand­s that Zanu-PF will now survive bigger and stronger after the fateful events that resulted in the dramatic end of his political career.

In reforming Zanu-PF we cannot depart from the ideologica­l foundation­s of this great liberation movement. Zanu-PF is a nationalis­t party founded on the need to transform the lives of the masses for the better.

It is not driven by a narrow agenda like labour for labour’s sake; or liberalism for liberalism’s sake. Zanu-PF is a party for the people across the social divides — labour, students, business, liberals, democrats, socialists, communists, capitalist­s and all other social identities that may affect the people of Zimbabwe from time to time.

Cde Victor Matemadand­a takes over the party’s Commissari­at department; and he has the daunting task of bringing the control of Zanu-PF back into the hands of the people.

The trauma of a few individual­s abusing power to run roughshod over all others has to be dealt with as the party rehabilita­tes its broken structures to once again revive the voice of the people.

Jonathan Moyo occupied this artificial place of assumed intelligen­ce where he postured as the custodian of Zanu-PF survival strategy, and gullible people like Kasukuwere rallied around him in zealous ignorant worship.

Sadly even the former first lady was bamboozled by the professor’s colourful language and pretenses at sophistica­tion. Surely geniuses must see guns coming.

The revolution for which Zanu-PF stands remains the same revolution for which our heroic freedom fighters fought for, but the narrative of where we are going has got to change.

The revolution cannot be protected outside its service to the people. The revolution has to transform the lives of the people. The reason our young people are now skeptical about the leadership of the older generation is simple. They have not seen or experience­d any positive transforma­tion associated with leadership from the people they look up to.

This is not a mere generation­al power struggle where one generation has become impatient in waiting for their turn to lead the nation.

This is about a betrayed generation trying to ensure its days on earth are not wasted in the anguish and pain of poverty.

Jonathan Moyo saw the opportunit­y in the disaffecti­on in our youth and was determined to exploit it for the demise of Zanu-PF. He had a measure of temporary success.

Now that his grand plan lies in ashes of shame and defeat, it is now incumbent upon Zanu-PF to ensure that never again will the power in the party be a monopoly of one man, never again will the people’s power be stored in one center that is only accessed by a chosen few, never again will the collective strategy of the party be stored in the head of one single person.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa is surely alive to the detriment of patronage. He has seen more than enough of this scourge over the years.

Governance is no feeding trough for the executive; the party is no cash cow for office holders, and Parliament is not a mere pathway to a better livelihood.

The Mnangagwa Government must distinguis­h itself as a government of service to the people of Zimbabwe, as a hard-working and honest facilitato­r of business opportunit­y and investment; and as a reliable member of the family of nations.

Full article on www.herald.co.zw

Editor’s note — Wafawarova returns to this page after engaging the Editorial team on matters of concern.

 ??  ?? Grace Mugabe
Grace Mugabe
 ??  ?? Jonathan Moyo
Jonathan Moyo
 ??  ?? Cde Mugabe
Cde Mugabe
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