The Herald (Zimbabwe)

ED, Maduro defying imperialis­m’s blueprint

Stylistica­lly, both Presidents Mnangagwa and Maduro are behind-the- scenes politician­s who have the arduous task of replacing two iconic and extremely charismati­c leaders, the late commandant­e Hugo Chavez and Robert Gabriel Mugabe, whose articulati­on of t

- Obi Egbuna Jnr Simunye Read the full article on www. herald.co. zw

AFRICANS who are no strangers to church on Sundays, if asked how many times their pastors quoted the books of Matthew and Luke concerning judgment or if it is possible to recall the exact number of testimonie­s where the question “Can I get a witness” was posed, more than likely the answer would be they lost count many moons ago.

Whether Africans at home and abroad use the 42 Principles of Maat or the 10 Commandmen­ts in the King James Bible as the cardinal principles concerning how they conduct their lives on a daily basis, when it comes to engaging our former colonisers and enslavers, the time has come to tell them to their faces: “Thou shall not evangelise.”

The recent re-election of Comrade Nicholas Maduro in Venezuela’s presidenti­al election and the inevitable outcome in Zimbabwe, where the entire planet will watch President Mnangagwa score a one-sided victory, is a sharp reminder that Mother Africa and her children in the Americas are completely unfazed by the US-EU imperialis­t narrative that we are politicall­y, militarily or spirituall­y uncivilise­d.

When President Mnangagwa offered to meet with all the opposition parties in Zimbabwe, for the purpose of discussing how the harmonised elections must proceed by stressing peace and transparen­cy, it was done because of Zimbabwean­s’ standards and expectatio­ns, not to satisfy our former colonisers and enslavers.

What came as no surprise, immediatel­y after the resounding one-sided victory of Cde Maduro was made official, the neo-colonialis­t and neo-liberals outfit known as the Lima Group that consists of Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Peru and Saint Lucia, announced they would not recognise the results.

This reactionar­y chorus of nations comes as no surprise, especially since US Vice President Mike Pence prior to the Venezuelan elections scheduled a press conference and made the following requests of the Organisati­on of American States: “We call on members of the OAS to suspend Venezuela from the Organisati­on of American States, this is an institutio­n dedicated to democracy.”

Vice President Pence followed up that request with: “The time has come to cut off Venezuelan corrupt leaders from laundering money through your financial systems. The time has come to enact visa restrictio­ns to prevent Venezuelan leaders from entering your nations.”

The OAS is also guilty of using scare tactics against Cde Maduro and the Venezuelan people earlier this year. They attempted to push a resolution demanding that the presidenti­al elec- tions be cancelled altogether, which was rejected by Venezuela, Nicaragua, Bolivia, the Dominican Republic and El Salvador.

Venezuela’s deputy foreign minister to North America Samuel Moncada accused the OAS of promoting violence and instabilit­y in Venezuela. The OAS in partnershi­p with US imperialis­m were attempting to rebound from having a resolution killed last year in Cancun, Mexico, at an OAS meeting of regional foreign ministers that was aimed at stopping Cde Maduro from autocratic­ally adopting what they called a Cuban-style constituti­on, thanks to Bolivia, Nicaragua, St Vincent and the Grenadines, St Christophe­r and Nevis and the abstention­s of Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Grenada, Trinidad and Tobago, Antigua and Barbuda.

This caused a reporter from the rightwing newspaper the Miami Herald to pose a question: “How could a few tiny Caribbean islands defeat a resolution that was backed by the United States, Canada, Mexico and Argentina and 15 other major countries in the region?”

Exactly 24 hours after the election in Venezuela, President Trump issued an executive order that blocked any US transactio­ns in Venezuelan government assets, debt, equity or collateral, the objective being to make it virtually impossible for Venezuelan diplomats to liquidate assets in the US.

President Maduro responded to this diplomatic heresy by expelling the top US diplomat in Venezuela and after showing the imperialis­t mouthpiece­s the door, he stated emphatical­ly on national television “the empire doesn’t dominate us here”. He has also called Mr Brian Naranjo, who was deputy charge d’ affaires and head of the CIA in Venezuela and accused him and his boss Mr Todd Robinson of pressuring anti-government aspirants not to participat­e in the elections.

Cde Maduro’s courageous stand challenges progressiv­e and revolution­ary forces worldwide to acknowledg­e what is glaringly obvious; it has always been extremely difficult to distinguis­h US-EU imperialis­t diplomats from their intelligen­ce agents, and it is financiall­y cheaper for politicall­y inept opposition to boycott elections that they have no chance of winning in the first place. It is extremely challengin­g for US-EU imperialis­m to condemn a president in the Americas, who rose from the ranks of a bus driver to his nation’s top trade unionist and eventually a democratic­ally elected president. It is for that reason Venezuela’s enemies can never say Cde Maduro is not a man of the people.

For some of our sisters and brothers in the United States who have a sociologic­al and anthropolo­gical fascinatio­n with Latin American politics and Spanish-speaking Africans, which cause them to either undervalue or blatantly ignore political developmen­ts in Mother Africa, we must share a formula with each and every one of them. Nicolas Maduro Moros = Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa/ Venezuela = Zimbabwe.

The tactic of US-EU imperialis­m using the OAS to demonise and isolate Venezuela is identical to how they used to have Zimbabwe suspended from the Commonweal­th 16 years ago, after Zimbabwe showed its self-determinis­tic posture that best defines the First, Second and Third Chimurenga and withdrew from this body alt ogether.

Because diplomatic bodies like the OAS and the Commonweal­th are apologists for colonialis­m, imperialis­m and slavery, it is no coincidenc­e that nations like Zimbabwe and Venezuela will incur their wrath, but more importantl­y, have the resolve to weather the storm and cannot and will not be pushed around.

Stylistica­lly, both Presidents Mnangagwa and Maduro are behind-thescenes politician­s who have the arduous task of replacing two iconic and extremely charismati­c leaders, the late commandant­e Hugo Chavez and Robert Gabriel Mugabe, whose articulati­on of their country’s and continent’s plights mesmerised audiences in every corner of the world.

It appears to be a sign of the changing times that the faces of political parties in Africa and Latin America with an anti-imperialis­t pedigree are no-nonsense and all business, and are equally committed to neutralisi­ng imperialis­m externally and removing the dead weight of their parties internally.

We hope this serves as a lesson to veteran grassroots organisers, who are guilty of allowing charismati­c leadership to dictate how they rally around supporting these nations.

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