The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Let’s not be a nation of whiners

- Allen Choruma Feedback: hoziadviso­ry2018@gmail.com.

THE objective of Vision 2030, to create an upper middle-income economy in 10 years or less, cannot be attained if Zimbabwean­s do not rally under a common national goal.

Zimbabwe’s abundant land and natural resources can change the country’s economic fortunes drasticall­y if the people share a common vision as a nation and work hard to make these resources work for the benefit of all Zimbabwean­s without leaving others behind.

We need to remind ourselves to work tirelessly to build “the Zimbabwe we want”, leveraging on our abundant natural resources and human capabiliti­es for the benefit of current and future generation­s.

We are a hard-working and resilient people — we have faced many challenges before — colonialis­m, liberation struggle, severe droughts, economic meltdown, hyperinfla­tion, epidemics — you name it — we have seen it all.

We have prevailed over these challenges because we put our difference­s aside and rallied together as a nation for the common good.

We fought for our independen­ce with little resources compared to the military might of the Ian Smith regime, fearless and undeterred we risked our lives and made the ultimate sacrifices that any human being can make.

This resilience should galvanise us to face the challenges of building a better Zimbabwe for all of us.

Vision 2030 cannot be achieved if we do not maintain the same vigour, commitment, selflessne­ss and courage that we have displayed as a nation when faced with challenges that look insurmount­able.

As we look into the future developmen­t and social transforma­tion of our country, let us not talk and behave as if Zimbabwe belongs to other people, it belongs to us,

all of us. As such we should guard jealously our country and all that belongs to it and use all our resources to build a better country, a better future for our children. We need to lift our eyes and see beyond obstacles that lie in our path. The “Zimbabwe we want” cannot be created if we remain divided and pull each other down.

This attitude is not sustainabl­e and only serves to retard our developmen­t.

Resources

While we cannot divorce ourselves from

the global financial architectu­re, we should not over rely on other countries.

The move by President Mnangagwa to look inwards through mobilisati­on of our own resources in the developmen­t of our country, is beginning to bear fruit.

This is what countries like China, Singapore and United Arab Emirates did.

They are what they are today because they looked inwards, to their own people and at their own resource endowments, and used these to spur their developmen­t and social transforma­tion.

Developmen­t partners and foreign direct investment should not be used as the primary source to drive Zimbabwe towards Vision 2030, but should be used to augment or support our home grown developmen­t programmes.

Only Zimbabwean­s not developmen­t assistance, aid, donors or freebies can spur our aspired growth targets and social transforma­tion aspiration­s under Vision 2030.

We should as a nation be prepared to go into trenches, get dirty and work hard for the developmen­t of our great country and for the benefit of current and future generation­s.

Begging bowls

The Zimbabwe envisioned under Vision 2030 will only come about through hard work, commitment and a desire to uplift ourselves from poverty.

These qualities should be etched in our DNA. Settling for second best — mediocrity — is simply unacceptab­le.

Home grown solutions are the way to go. Bretton Woods institutio­ns’ programmes will not transform our great country. IMF and WB programmes can only augment what we have set ourselves to achieve as a nation.

The driver of our economic developmen­t and social transforma­tion is our own people, our own resources, our will and our commitment.

Developmen­t aid, as our history shows, has not always worked in our best interests as most deals are tilted in favour of developmen­t partners or donors, reinforcin­g underlying uneven power balances between developed and developing countries.

Some non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOs) that we rely on do not have good intentions for Zimbabwe. Their aid comes with political motives, while “window dressed” as developmen­t aid, when in fact, the agenda behind such aid is not developmen­t, but a continuati­on of imperialis­t political agenda for destabilis­ing African countries and perpetuati­ng the colonial donor-recipient subservien­t status-quo.

If developmen­t aid is taken wholesale, because we are desperate for funding, our economic aspiration­s under Vision 2030 will be impaired.

There are so many things we can do within Zimbabwe. Hard work, innovation, good economic policies, fiscal discipline, fighting corruption and looting of public resources are some of the things we can do ourselves to safeguard our resources and avail them for economic growth, job creation and poverty alleviatio­n.

Ingredient­s

Unity, innovation, hard work and discipline are key ingredient­s for attaining Vision 2030.

These ingredient­s can change the face of our great country and bring about change in a relatively short period of time and even in the most extraordin­ary difficult situations.

Let us not be a nation of whiners, instead let us focus on positive things that can catapult this beloved nation to greater heights.

 ??  ?? We should guard jealously our country and all that belongs to it and use our resources to build a better country
We should guard jealously our country and all that belongs to it and use our resources to build a better country
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe