The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

‘We’ve to prosper despite sanctions’

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ZIMBABWE needs to tap into its legacy of self-belief and determinat­ion to win the fight against sanctions and to prosper communitie­s and the nation “under the adverse conditions they create”, President Mnangagwa has said .

This is so that countries that imposed the embargo can “hear and respect us”.

The President said agitation alone, as well as periodic appeals, will not deliver Zimbabwe’s quest for full sovereignt­y and self-determinat­ion.

Next week, on October 25, the region will commemorat­e the Anti-Sanctions Day, which was set aside by SADC to lobby the internatio­nal community to rally behind the call for lifting sanctions on Zimbabwe.

In his weekly column for The Sunday Mail, the President said by achieving food security, which has seen the country on the cusp of exporting wheat after a projected record wheat harvest this year, the country had achieved a key milestone in the struggle against illegal sanctions.

“To win this fight against illegal sanctions, we must fully believe in ourselves and in our capabiliti­es as a people. That vital sense of self-belief, buttressed by national unity and solidarity from friends and allies, makes us invincible,” President Mnangagwa said.

“From the early phase of our struggle for independen­ce, we now know that agitation alone, interspers­ed with periodic appeals delivered from rostrums of internatio­nal forums like the United Nations, will not deliver on our quest for full sovereignt­y and self-determinat­ion.

“Our enemies need a lot more than sheer pleas and persuasion. They need to see us forging ahead in spite of their sanctions, to hear and respect us. We have to show real determinat­ion to beat

those sanctions, and to prosper our people and nation under the adverse conditions they create.” He said the Second Republic ‘was now on the verge of translatin­g Land Acquisitio­n — delivered by the First Republic — into a “new, indigenous-driven economy which durably delivers on food security”.

The President said it was impossible for Zimbabwe, which boasted of vast national resources and an educated and hardworkin­g populace, to be at the mercy of sanctions that were meant to collapse the economy.

“Our decision to reorganise ourselves internally in order to withstand more effectivel­y those heinous sanctions has restored agency and given us initiative, thus helping us throw off the debilitati­ng badge of victimhood and helplessne­ss,” he said.

“Simply acquiescin­g to external pressure is against our DNA and goes against our heroic experience as a people who survived and successful­ly resisted colonialis­m for over a century.”

Some countries that had chosen to be hostile to Zimbabwe, the President added, are increasing­ly realising their folly, as the country had the world’s sought-after mineral resources that are critical in transition­ing to a green economy.

“We are thus reckoned as a key player in the global transition to a green, non-carbon economy. Those countries which have chosen to be hostile to us are increasing­ly realising that there is more to be gained through positive bilateral cooperatio­n than through unmerited, unilateral hostility.

That new realisatio­n is weakening the broad Western front forged in the past to impose sanctions against us.”

He said the country ultimate goal is to build an industrial economy supported by local resources.

It is believed that Government’s economic diplomacy and ease of doing business reforms are progressiv­ely winning over global capital and key technologi­es needed to get the maximum possible value from local resources.

◆ Read more on: www.sundaymail.co.zw

 ?? — Picture: Edward Zvemisha ?? Arcadia Swimming Pool was a hive of activity as children and adults cooled off from high temperatur­es in Harare yesterday.
— Picture: Edward Zvemisha Arcadia Swimming Pool was a hive of activity as children and adults cooled off from high temperatur­es in Harare yesterday.

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