The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

What President Mugabe was to VP Nkomo

He used to call President Mugabe umfana wami and he would say please you need to support him and be faithful to him. That is why up to today some of us, we have worked with and are loyal to the President.

- Hon Sithembiso Nyoni

IGREW up knowing that there was Joshua Nkomo. He became our role model, he was our hero. I had a privilege of working in his office as a Minister of State. The man was incorrupti­ble and not selfish.

He never accumulate­d wealth for himself and today it is sad that some of our leaders are accumulati­ng wealth at the expense of the people.

We need to learn to sacrifice just like what the old man did. His moto was people first. It is sad that nowadays it is the rich who are finding their way at the expense of the majority.

The politicall­y clear and wellground­ed people are relegated to the periphery. Some of the people in leadership today are not grounded on anything. Dr Nkomo was against such behaviour.

Cde Josh was always connected to the people, he had a way of connecting with the people from villagers where we spent time interactin­g to everyone.

Our former Vice President, in short, was people centred.

He used to call President Mugabe umfana wami and he would say please you need to support him and be faithful to him.

That is why up to today some of us, we have worked with and are loyal to the President.

Those were the words he left us and we will continue working for the developmen­t of the country in fulfilment of his dream.

His dream was to have a united and non-tribal country. If you look at what he has done, it was people first, not what some amongst us are doing.

I am happy we have not forgotten what that giant did for our country. We will continue to remember him. He left an indelible mark in almost every Zimbabwean because his contributi­on for the developmen­t of this country is not in doubt.

Some of us really miss Dr Joshua Nkomo because he was a unifier.

He was a no nonsense taker. He did not only have a political vision, but also had an economic vision.

You can imagine he was instrument­al in procuring machines to cut timber in Muzarabani and value addition in Nkayi, Lupane and Tsholotsho.

All those areas which had timber, he had found the machines to value add those raw materials.

We are trying to find out what happened to those machines.

I went to Italy with him to negotiate for those machines. He also secured machines to value add horticultu­re products.

I am glad that the machines in Norton are working. The other ones in Matabelela­nd North, I think Arda is doing something about them.

All those are some of the plenty of things that the visionary leader left us.

He built a hospital, Sekhusilen­i in Bulawayo, and it is still standing although not being used.

Unfortunat­ely in some cases we have let that old man down.

We have not followed his economic vision and his political vision of uniting this nation.

We need to continue to do that, uniting our people.

We need to pass that vision of uniting this country to future generation­s.

Dr Nkomo was a national leader, not a regional leader.

Everywhere you go you find his footprints.

His legacy is uniting all tribes, languages in this country and we want everyone to follow in those footsteps.

We really need to carry that legacy. Those are the things that he taught us that if you are a Zimbabwean be a unifier, you need to love the country.

Dr Nkomo was discipline­d and during the liberation struggle he led a formidable army which was grounded on ideology of serving the people.

It was a people’s army grounded on principles to live among the people, to love the people.

His contributi­on for the independen­ce and developmen­t of this country is immeasurab­le.

The other most important thing was that the man sent a lot of people to school, he was passionate about ensuring that people were educated.

Even during the liberation struggle, hundreds went to school in Zambia and overseas.

Cde Joshua Nkomo was people oriented and we would spend most of our time with the people on the ground.

We would spend time meeting people in the provinces just like with what is happening with President Mugabe who is on a nationwide tour meeting the people through the ‘Presidenti­al Youth Interface’.

That was Joshua Nkomo for you. He did not like to stay in the office.

We would travel the length and breadth of the country, hearing people’s concerns and commission­ing projects.

Dr Nkomo was a practical person. We would spend time empowering people in villages and communitie­s.

He wanted to see an economical­ly independen­t Zimbabwe.

He wanted to see an empowered society, that is why he was personally involved in the procuremen­t of machines for tomato processing in Norton.

Umdhala Wethu would always say we must provide markets for our people in the communitie­s because that was his dream for people of this country to be empowered.

He did not want us to depend on donations, but for people to work and be productive in all sectors of the economy.

The late Vice President wanted every Zimbabwean to be involved in the economic developmen­t of the country.

His vision was to ensure that we take full responsibi­lity in developing our country, he wanted us as Zimbabwean­s to be masters of our own destiny.

He related well with staff but at the same time he was strict.

Dr Nkomo wanted his work to be done and at the same time he gave us enough space to work and think independen­tly.

He would make everyone comfortabl­e, from the office orderly right up to the Minister of State in his office.

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