The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Sanctions agenda and the bane of change blindness

- Lawson Mabhena News & Politics Editor —

WHEN scholars Daniel Simons and Daniel Levin set out to investigat­e the phenomenon of “change blindness”, they conducted an experiment whereby a complete stranger would start a conversati­on with a pedestrian and following a brief disruption, the stranger would be substitute­d, but the pedestrian would not even notice.

The brief disruption involved two people carrying a door between the stranger and pedestrian in conversati­on, after which the pedestrian would continue with the conversati­on without noticing that they were now talking to a different person.

Psychologi­sts describe change blindness as the tendency to miss changes in one’s immediate visual environmen­t.

While change occurs regularly, in most instances, it goes unnoticed. However, failure to notice or acknowledg­e change does not stop change from occurring.

In Zimbabwe, the immediate visual political environmen­t has changed dramatical­ly over the past few years. For starters, in November 2017, the country had a new leader for the first time since the late national hero and former president Robert Mugabe assumed the reins in 1980.

The next landmark change was probably the peaceful environmen­t under which elections were held to usher in the Second Republic. Local, regional and internatio­nal electoral observer missions, some of whom had last came to Zimbabwe almost two decades ago, were invited to promote transparen­cy.

No major incidents of violence or intimidati­on were recorded during the pre-election period and on voting day, July 30, 2018.

Although a violent demonstrat­ion instigated by the opposition MDC-Alliance led to the loss of life on August 1 as poll results were coming in, an internatio­nal commission was set up to investigat­e the post-election violence.

The commission was chaired by Mr Kgalema Motlanthe, the former president of the Republic of South Africa, and composed of six other commission­ers.

This was a first in the history of the country, with the findings of the Motlanthe Commission being made public in December of the same year.

On the constituti­onal front, major milestones have been achieved through the institutio­n of media, political, electoral and legal

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An adverse report by Mr Voule is not worth celebratin­g as the effects will not just hurt President Mnangagwa and his Government, but the ordinary man in the street, the ordinary granny in the fields and the ordinary child in a central hospital.

reforms as well as the anti-graft drive.

The process of mending internatio­nal relations and building investor confidence has also scored bigtime results with internatio­nal oganisatio­ns and regional blocs reaching out to the new administra­tion.

It is, therefore, without a doubt that change has occurred on Zimbabwe’s political landscape.

However, brief interrupti­ons by individual­s and countries bent on giving life to illegal sanctions imposed by the West, have resulted in change blindness.

As a result of this change blindness, political discourse has been very poor, based on untruths and intolerant of level-headedness.

Internatio­nal relations and African political economy expert, Professor Ian Taylor, attributed the poor discourse in most African countries to intellectu­al chancers motivated by fat cheques from Western countries, which are ever-willing to fund the promotion of their hegemony.

“A major issue with this regard is that in most African countries there is a real lack of any serious ideologica­l debate about the type of social system that will engender developmen­t and ensure broad improvemen­ts in the standard of living of the people. Intellectu­als, who might critically contribute to this debate, are generally marginalis­ed, while the popular sphere is dominated by opportunis­ts — many sourcing their funding from the West — who promote the discourse that there is no alternativ­e to neoliberal reform,” Prof Taylor wrote in “Africa Rising”.

The opportunis­ts dominating the ideologica­l debate in Zimbabwe are already celebratin­g what some sections of the media have called “a damning report on Zimbabwe” by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights, Mr Clement Nyaletsoss­i Voule.

Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors’ Associatio­n (ZHDA) president Dr Peter Magombeyi’s convenient abduction has also been used to cement claims of human rights abuse by Government.

Intellectu­als have been marginalis­ed from the Dr Magombeyi debate whose order of events are in direct defiance of the logic of thinking.

The entire debacle was choreograp­hed to allow for a “damning” report to give impetus to illegal sanctions. Under the plan, the brief disruption would ensure Mr Voule’s change blindness.

The Harvard Medical School’s U-turn on the honour it bestowed on First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa for her charity work, is also telling.

What Harvard intellectu­als said in the first instance when bestowing the honour is the truth. It is a truth that would clash with the Magombeyi narrative.

The intellectu­als backed down, but those with ears have heard change has come to Zimbabwe’s health sector.

The opportunis­ts are, indeed, revelling in a hollow victory. A victory based on lies, deceit and self-hate. A victory that is actually a loss to the people of Zimbabwe.

An adverse report by Mr Voule is not worth celebratin­g as the effects will not just hurt President Mnangagwa and his Government, but the ordinary man in the street, the ordinary granny in the fields and the ordinary child in a central hospital.

The sooner Zimbabwean­s realise that the sanctions agenda is not their own, the better.

 ??  ?? Mr Clement Nyaletsoss­i Voule
Mr Clement Nyaletsoss­i Voule
 ??  ?? Dr Magombeyi
Dr Magombeyi
 ??  ??

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