NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zimbabwe: A deferred dream

- Paidamoyo Muzulu is a journalist based in Harare. He writes here in his personal capacity. Paidamoyo Muzulu

TODAY is exactly three years since the late former President Robert Mugabe was booted out in a military coup. Many Zimbabwean­s poured onto the streets celebratin­g the ouster, the humiliatio­n of a man who had become an institutio­n over 37 years in power. A new dawn beckoned.

The military had six days earlier issued a statement marking the coup in slow motion. In the statement, it said Mugabe was safe and it wanted to deal with crooks surroundin­g him.

The coup did not have only local support, but even some leading countries like Britain, China and United States supported it in varying degrees. Many were happy to see Mugabe’s back just as many were frustrated when he refused to resign.

Even the opposition in its many facets supported the military usurpation of power. The MDC Alliance co-sponsored the impeachmen­t motion in Parliament. In haste, all parliament­ary procedures were dispensed with and Parliament wanted Mugabe out at all costs.

The military had used the slogan — Operation Restore Legacy – to justify its interventi­on. Even the High Court in an ex-parte applicatio­n ruled the military action was constituti­onal. The coup was executed nearly smoothly with minimum bloodshed, but few are aware it was because Mugabe had personally decided against fighting back and plunging the nation into chaos. Mugabe had people who were ready to die for him and possibly South Africa could have intervened militarily on his side.

What was Mugabe’s legacy? He played a big role in bringing independen­ce. Mugabe had brought education and health for all. In his twilight years, he had led the land resettleme­nt revolution and in Sadc, Mugabe had helped South Africa secure independen­ce, kept Renamo’s Afonso Dhlakama at bay in Mozambique and protected the Democratic Republic of Congo’s territoria­l integrity.

Mugabe had also the legacy of having wanted to entrench a oneparty State system, overstayin­g in power and being soft on corruption. This is a legacy I guess Mugabe was not happy to be associated with, but all the same part of his legacy during the 37-year uninterrup­ted reign. In Zanu PF he had become a deity, no one dared challenge him openly. Senior party leaders competed to endorse him at every congress – it was nauseating.

After three years, it is becoming clear which legacy the military restored. It restored a legacy of entrenchin­g one-party State rule, being soft on corruption and creating another deity in Zanu PF. President Emmerson Mnangagwa has tinkered with the Constituti­on to entrench his rule, has changed the appointmen­t procedure of heads of the Judiciary. He has housed the anti-corruption fight in his office, but his three years in power have shown where the corruption is. He has mixed with shady characters, had his ministers embroiled in multimilli­on-dollar tender scandals.

On the other hand, Mnangagwa is decimating Mugabe’s legacy on education, health and the land revolution. It is a fact that Mugabe during his reign and particular­ly the first two decades each year set aside large chunks of the national budget for education and health. He expanded access to these two social services and in the process winning accolades from United Nations agencies such as Unesco and World Health Organisati­on and United Nations Population Fund, among others.

Mugabe, despite his British mannerisms, was a socialist at heart. Education and health were close to his heart and he strived to deliver to the majority of the people. Mugabe believed what he termed scientific socialism and delivered land to his people albeit in a chaotic manner.

Mnangagwa is an antithesis to that. Mnangagwa has over the last three years preached the gospel of the Bretton Woods institutio­ns – the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank – of privatisat­ion and supremacy of free market economics.

Privatisat­ion and free market economics religion has Finance minister Mthuli Ncube as its local bishop. He has preached the gospel with verve, hysterical passion and the belief of a saint. Over the last three years he has worked hard on the privatisat­ion of education and health. His budget allocation­s have been far below the acceptable internatio­nal standards such as the Abuja declaratio­n that says health should be allocated 15% of the national budget.

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the wicked plan to privatise education and health. As the public schools’ teachers are on strike for better remunerati­on and working conditions, private schools are busy teaching and writing Cambridge examinatio­ns. On the health side, COVID-19 tests are mainly being done by private institutio­ns. Some players like Sakunda – Kuda Tagwireyi — immediatel­y invested into the sector buying two hospitals and is smiling all the way to the bank.

Teachers and nurses have unintentio­nally abated the fast tracking of the privatisat­ion of social services by Mnangagwa and Ncube. Slowly, but certainly, citizens are losing faith in the public services, thereby buttressin­g the call for privatisat­ion of the same. Mnangagwa is having it easy as both the opposition and civil society also worship at the altar of capital.

As the country looks back to Mugabe’s capitulati­on, Operation Restore Legacy is being laid bare as a ruse. The legacy that was being sought was change of animals at the feeding trough, the poor should die and forget about education — their station as hewers of wood and drawers of water has been cemented under the new dispensati­on. A dream of November 2017 has been deferred

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