The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Not one bad word to be said

- Brian Chitemba

THE early hours of a drizzly Wednesday morning marked a new chapter in Zimbabwe’s colourful political history.

It is the morning when the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, led by General Constantin­o Guveya Chiwenga, conducted a pre-dawn operation to protect democracy from its real enemies — over-ambitious and power-hungry politician­s without a principled bone in their bodies.

The ZDF stated that it intervened to pacify a potentiall­y volatile political, social and economic situation.

It’s a day this generation and those to come will discuss, debate and study. It’s a day when global media turned their eyes on Zimbabwe.

The story of the ZDF political and socio-economic stabilisat­ion interventi­on reminded the world once again that this is a unique country.

As events unfold, world organisati­ons such as the United Nations, African Union, European Union, Southern African Developmen­t Community, and global powerhouse­s such as China and Britain, spoke as if they were reading from the same script.

It’s as if one speech writer rendered his/her special service to all the organisati­ons and countries.

Not one person or organisati­on of note has condemned the move by the ZDF. Everyone is simply preaching peace, restraint and progress.

The ZDF has stood by its word. They are weeding out criminal elements from President Mugabe’s inner circle.

“We are only targeting criminals around him (President Mugabe) who are committing crimes that are causing social and economic suffering in the country in order to bring them to justice,” said ZDF spokespers­on Major-General Sibusiso Moyo, who became an instant celebrity with his Wednesday morning broadcast.

“As soon as we have accomplish­ed our mission we expect that the situation will return to normalcy.”

Unconfirme­d reports say Higher and Tertiary Education Minister Professor Jonathan Moyo, Finance Minister Dr Ignatius Chombo, Zanu- PF Youth League secretary Cde Kudzanayi Chipanga and Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on deputy director-general Albert Ngulube are under military guard.

Other reports say Zimbabwe Republic Police Commission­er-General Dr Augustine Chihuri has again found himself under military guard.

As events moved swiftly, Sadc chair and South African President Jacob Zuma called for peace, calm and restraint.

His voice was seconded by African Union Commission chair Moussa Mahamat who urged “all stakeholde­rs to address the current situation in accordance with the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe and the relevant instrument­s of the African Union, including the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance”.

EU spokespers­on Catherine Ray said her bloc was following the unfolding situation with concern and encouraged respect for the rule of law and the fundamenta­l rights of citizens.

Since early Wednesday morning, the ZDF has maintained peace as Zimbabwean­s go about their business without any hindrance.

If anything, there is a breath of fresh air and a spring in people’s steps. It is as if the ZDF, in one fell swoop, has lifted a burden off the shoulders of millions of people.

The military has also maintained the constituti­onal order and not usurped civilian rule. The President was at the Zimbabwe Open University graduation ceremony on Friday, the judiciary is functionin­g, businesses are doing what they always do and schools and health centres are offering services as normal.

This has seen Gen Chiwenga and his men and women being hailed by all and sundry.

From local opposition political parties to foreign news organisati­ons like the Washington Post, Guardian, Telegraph, Daily Mail, BBC, CNN, ENCA, Al Jazeera, Sky News, SABC and ANN7, no one has a bad word for the Zimbabwe Defence Forces.

There is broad agreement that the military interventi­on is a step in the right direction.

That the ZDF stands for economic developmen­t, for people’s welfare, for justice and for democracy can no longer be called into question.

Gen Chiwenga’s action has sown the seeds of optimism that Zimbabwe will rise, and has killed opportunis­tic tendencies by politician­s who think that they can abuse office to accumulate wealth while the rest of the nation groans under the weight of their transgress­ions.

And politicall­y, the ZDF has proved that Zanu-PF need not grapple endlessly with the “succession issue”.

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