The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Time to appreciate Zim progress

- Nobleman Runyanga Correspond­ent

IT is a few days after the first anniversar­y of the history-making 30 July 2018 harmonised election when Zimbabwean­s participat­ed in the first harmonised elections in the new dispensati­on. And what a refreshing­ly different election it was! But not so for the opposition, that lost and continues to wallow in denial which has seen it resort to the destructiv­e politics of baseless protests and vengeance sabotage.

Refreshing­ly different election

It was a different election even for the opposition. In the 19 years of its existence the MDC had never had so much unfettered access to the country’s rural areas — the deciders of the overall winners of any national election in Zimbabwe.

Thanks to the new dispensati­on’s opening up of the democratic space, that party’s leader, Nelson Chamisa traversed the length and breadth of the country chalking over 70 rallies which he wasted by delivering utopian promises and outright falsehoods.

It was a different poll even for some Western countries and blocs such as the Commonweal­th and the European Union (EU) which last observed elections in the country in a while.

This time around they were invited to observe the polls together with regional and continenta­l blocs, the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) and African Union (AU) respective­ly. Observer missions obviously differ in their perception­s and observatio­ns, but they were unanimous in one observatio­n: that the political environmen­t ahead of the elections was hugely different from the one that characteri­sed past polls under the Robert Mugabe administra­tion.

As Zimbabwe basked in the sunshine of a new electoral dispensati­on, the MDC sensing the unmistaken smell of defeat, sought to throw spanners into the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission’s (ZEC) clockwork of seamless election administra­tion by unleashing its excitable youths onto the streets of Harare to protests against ZEC which was in the process of collating and announcing election results. This led to the unfortunat­e 1 August,2019 incident.

Building the country Following his win, President Mnangagwa, who had no illusions about the work that awaited him and Zimbabwean­s in rebuilding the country from the ruins of the previous administra­tion, went to work straight away. In the one year that he has been in office he has acquitted himself admirably and laid the framework for economic prosperity.

One of the contentiou­s issues which the opposition always harps on is electoral reforms. Government is already seized with attending to the matter and the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade, Sibusiso Moyo has already told the world that by mid-next year Zimbabwe would have completed the electoral reforms task.

Another issue which citizens have frequently complained to Government about is the cancer of corruption which has gnawed at the very core of the economy for decades limiting economic developmen­t and affecting the quality of life of many.

Noticing that the Mugabe-era Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) only acted as a window dresser in a country that was festering with unbridled corruption, President Mnangagwa appointed a new and no-nonsense commission chairperso­n, Justice Loice Matanda-Moyo and gave it “teeth” by granting the body arresting powers.

Unlike Mugabe who would pick commission­ers, President Mnangagwa allowed Parliament to handle the selection of the commission­er in line with the dictates of the Constituti­on.

The process enabled members of the public to nominate potential commission­ers. To demonstrat­e his desire for a united Zimbabwe, he assented to the appointmen­t of a known opposition politician, Jessie Majome to the commission, something which was unheard of in the past.

Barely a month into its term the commission has already nabbed Government bigwigs such as the Minister of Environmen­t, Tourism and Hospitalit­y Industry, Prisca Mupfumira and former Director of State Residences, Douglas Tapfuma as it moves to tackle over 200 high profile cases of corruption.

It is a given that in order for the economy to recover Government needs to create an enabling environmen­t and it has moved to do that.

It has consolidat­ed the Special Economic Zones and the Zimbabwe Investment Authority Acts into the Zimbabwe Investment Developmen­t Authority (ZIDA) which will spearhead the country’s investment drive.

While the results of all these painstakin­g efforts are yet to cascade down to the ordinary man in the street because of the extent of the Mugabe regime’s post-2000 ruinous policies, Government has made significan­t strides on the economic front.

The Transition­al Stabilisat­ion Programme (TSP) has received approval from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) which has agreed to hand-hold the country through a staff monitoring programme as it implements the economic blueprint. The EU has also given Government’s economic recovery efforts thumbs-up.

For years, the opposition and other stakeholde­rs have complained of what they termed restrictiv­e laws such as the Access to Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy Act, the Public Order and Security Act and the Broadcasti­ng Services Act.

Parliament is currently seized with a raft of replacemen­t legislatio­n for the first two and the amendment of the last one. This article would not have enough space to chronicle and document all the progress which the new administra­tion has registered in the first year of its existence.

The defeated opposition’s mumblings As was to be expected, while most progressiv­e Zimbabwean­s look back at the bygone year with a mixture of joy and hope despite the accompanyi­ng temporary pain, the opposition marked the first anniversar­y foreground­ing the sad incident of 1 August, 2018.

Given the opposition’s 20-year record of poor poll performanc­e, it was expected that it would seek global sympathy by reminding the world of the incident, but the MDC should be reminded that most of the victims of the incident were not its members, but innocent Zimbabwean­s who were caught in the crossfire.

It therefore cannot seek to wring political capital from using unmerited victimhood.

The MDC was beaten fairly and squarely. Even a half-hearted poll petition failed to reverse the people’s decision. In fact, the MDC should be told here and now that its 30 July loss was not as a result of an alleged ZEC poll theft as it shamelessl­y claims to the world.

The party was denied victory by the ultimate arbiters, the electorate owing to Chamisa’s inelectabi­lity and the party’s lack of a sound ideology and life-changing programmes.

Frustrated by its own failure, the MDC has been seeking to unseat President Mnangagwa using protests using baseless claims of illegitima­cy on the part of the President.

One of the people who have bought this lousy story is the chairman of the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Jim Risch who noted the occasion of the 1 August anniversar­y by issuing a statement using offensive language such as “Zimbabwe is facing a worse political and economic crisis today than in 2017 when long-time ruler Robert Mugabe was forced from power” to aid and abet the opposition’s long-held desire to unseat a Constituti­onally-elected Government and replace it with the US’ own preferred stooge such as the MDC’s vice president, Tendai Biti.

Risch should know that Zimbabwe is a sovereign country over which the US has no suzerainty and should therefore not meddle in her internal affairs. The senator also rumbled something to the effect that Government should “hold to account” those responsibl­e for the incident as if he did not hear the Secretary in the Ministry of Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services, Nick Mangwana last month stating that those who shot the victims “were not off the hook.”

Risch’s one-sided statement was conspicuou­s by its silence on the role of the MDC in the matter. The MDC set its yobs onto the streets of Harare unleashing an orgy of mindless and destructiv­e protests against ZEC as if the electoral body is in place to award victory to an opposition rejected by the electorate.

The protests was uncalled for and no security services worth its salt would sit idly and watch while a motley group of loafing youths unleashed mayhem in the country’s capital city in the middle of a major national election.

The content of Risch’s statement is wilfully oblivious to the Motlanthe Commission which investigat­ed the matter and Government’s consequent appointmen­t of Cabinet ministers led by the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs, Ziyambi Ziyambi to address issues raised by the commission and concerns of the various observer missions to the 30 July poll.

He ignored the ongoing re-branding of the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZPC) following the commission’s concerns over the way it handled the riots of 1 August 2018.

Opportunis­m

The 1 August, 2018 incident is a reality which cannot be wished away. That is why Government put together the Motlanthe Commission and proceeded to put in place the mechanics of addressing its findings.

Risch should be ashamed of himself for opportunis­tically seeking to lecture a foreign Government on how it should run its own affairs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe