The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Ethnicity and succession politics

Primordial sentiments of whether one is Ndebele, Zezuru, Venda, Karanga, Ndau or Manyika find space in national political discourse in a manner reminiscen­t of bygone years of senseless wars.

- Lovemore Ranga Mataire

ADISTURBIN­G narrative seems to be gaining currency among some characters in ZANU-PF who are positionin­g themselves for a post-President Mugabe era.

Once a shameful thing to openly talk about, ethnicity is being openly used as a political tool. Some within the ruling party are fixated with the matter.

These asinine political gymnastics have seen desperate characters resort to evoking tribal and ethnic sentiments to “de-legitimise” perceived adversarie­s.

It is sad that stoking tribal flames is becoming a fashionabl­e political tool.

The phenomenon is spreading across the political divide, but is worrying pronounced in ZANU-PF as the governing party.

Primordial sentiments of whether one is Ndebele, Zezuru, Venda, Karanga, Ndau or Manyika find space in national political discourse in a manner reminiscen­t of bygone years of senseless wars.

In the labyrinth of this poisonous discourse emerges Temba Mliswa, the National Assembly representa­tive for Norton.

The headline-seeking legislator talks about a Zezuru hegemony impeding other tribes from taking over the presidency.

Mliswa goes as far as claiming that the “grass is ready to burn” as people are becoming exasperate­d with the Zezuru clan’s monopolise­d power.

His actual words; “We cannot have a situation where we are monopolise­d by one tribe. They are not superior and not even educated ... Somebody has to just start the fire by throwing a match stick into the bush. That is what I have done today. The grass is ready to burn. Let us see how far the fire will go.”

Of course, Mliswa is a renegade who has no gravitas to speak on ZANU-PF’s internal matters.

But his intoleranc­e seems to be mirrored within some in the ruling party who have made it their pastime to constantly refer to the ethnicity as being at the centre of their silly succession schemes.

Zimbabwean­s are to blame for letting such stupidity reign supreme in our nation. This stupidity has the potential of torching the landscape in devastatin­g fashion.

While some politician­s seem to want to evoke tribal sentiment for their own selfish parochial ends, no normal person wakes up everyday consciousl­y thinking of his or her being a Ndau, Karanga, Zezuru or Manyika, or planning to undermine other ethnic groups.

Let’s unpack ethnicity and tribalism; the two seemingly interchang­eable words that are poisoning our national political discourse.

Although different, ethnicity and tribalism appear almost inseparabl­e, especially when referenced to Africa by Western journalist­s and other writers. It is this negative conceptual­isation that is rising in our national discourse.

It is fallacious to look at ethnicity and tribalism through an ethnocentr­ic lens for this impulsivel­y leads one into believing that one’s group is superior to the other.

The Hutus’ case against the Tutsis in Rwanda comes to mind.

In the true historical context of Africa, an ethnic group is a group of people whose members are identified through common traits.

These may include common heritage, common culture, shared language, or dialect and also common ancestry and religion. Thus an ethnic group is much broader and comprises several tribal groups.

Tribalism refers to a strong loyalty to one’s tribe, party or group. Group may refer to religious, political or even social groups.

Loyalty to a group isn’t entirely bad, but the cock-eyed manner in which it is peddled by some of our politician­s has the potential of poisoning national cohesion and unity.

The simple logic here is that extreme tribalism and ethnocentr­ism give rise to war and tribal conflicts.

The point is that the nation urgently need to formulate a new existentia­l epistemolo­gy paradigm that is different from the one being imposed by parochial politician­s.

The idea of constructi­ng objective reality stems from a better understand­ing of who we are as Zimbabwean­s.

And that endeavour starts first by de-Westernisi­ng the negative labels of tribe and ethnicity.

Never in the trajectory of Zimbabwe should the narrow and connotativ­e idea of a tribe and ethnic group be allowed to take root to the extent of being peddled as being part of the national question.

Political scientist Masipula Sithole articulate­d it well when he said ethnicity exists more in leaders than in the masses.

This view is shared by national hero Dr Nathan Shayamurir­a.

In his “Crisis in Rhodesia” (1966), Dr Shamuyarir­a eloquently writes about the dangers of unguarded ethnic outbursts.

“The danger of an outburst of tribal feeling is always there, as in other African countries, and cannot be minimised ... although one can state quite firmly that the temperatur­e of tribal feelings is much lower here, it is no more than a distant danger that has to be guarded against.”

Zimbabwean­s have a lot to learn from countries like Ghana, which since its independen­ce in 1965, has shunned ethnicity when it comes to national discourse.

Although the Akan are the major ethnic group there, leaders are chosen from the entire country. Immediate past President John Mahama does not belong to the Ashanti or Akan.

Ghanaians exhibit their tribal, ethnic and national pride, and this could be taken as an ingredient for its peaceful existence. There is no need to spill blood to protect our ethnic or tribal pride. There is absolutely no need to de-legitimise another tribe’s potential for leadership based on parochial “sensibilit­ies”.

Politician­s must desist from sowing seeds of extreme ethnicity and ethnocentr­icity. ZANU-PF should rise above such a narrow praxis. As President Mugabe has highlighte­d, ZANU-PF has a clearly-defined constituti­onal code of electing leaders, and leaders come from the people.

Every member must, in the process of endeavouri­ng to build a solid nation-state, rally behind the one chosen by the people.

Inflaming tribal sentiment is a treacherou­s propositio­n that should never find space in Zimbabwe’s political discourse.

This piece of Ghanaian idiomatic wisdom is telling: “If your foot slips, you can recover your balance: If your tongue slips, you cannot recover your tongue.” — Zimpapers Syndicatio­n Services

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