NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Why are you fearful of your citizens?

-  Tendai Ruben Mbofana is a social justice activist, author, and speaker. He writes here in his personal capacity.

spouse, or even have a good night’s sleep due to fear of being assassinat­ed, or being plotted against.

We have seen presidents of other nations freely mingling with their citizens.

We have even seen some of them jogging every morning in their neighbourh­oods, and even riding to work on a bicycle without much protection, save for one or two aides.

The joke I used to love telling was that, the last time a person like Mugabe ever saw the real Zimbabwe was on April 17 1980, a day before the country attained its independen­ce from Britain, and he was sworn in as Prime Minister.

Since then he was always sheltered from the rest of the “real” country, such that even when travelling in his “ZIM 1” car, both sides would be shielded.

What joy is truly there when one is always gripped by unparallel­ed fear, and cannot even be free to enjoy the country he claims to lead?

The big question is: Whose fault is it anyway?

Our State-controlled media is always fond of referring to the President and his wife as, “the father and mother of the nation”.

I do not subscribe to such a school of thought since that is an antiquated concept dating back to medieval monarchica­l ages.

Kings and queens were revered like deities whose family lineage had been anointed by God to rule over kingdoms.

Your Excellency, in a constituti­onal democracy such as ours, a leader is elected by the people, answers to them, and as such, can never be their father.

Since when have children chosen who their father (and mother) should be?

Why in the world would a parent fear his or her own children?

In the case of our own Zimbabwe, it needs no rocket scientist to figure it out.

As our leader, you are abusive, brutal, inconsider­ate, unloving, and oppressive, hence your fear of the populace.

You take all the family resources that should benefit every member equitably and squander them on your own while your people wallow in abject poverty, hunger, and misery.

When a “father” behaves so irresponsi­bly and cruelly of course, he has every reason to fear the wrath of his “children”, who he knows one day might say enough is enough.

As much as the “father” may buy time by instilling fear in his “children” through brazen brutality, the one who is incapacita­ted by immeasurab­le fear will be the “father” himself, for he knows full well that, once the “children” have had enough of the bullying, their fear will vanish.

No wonder the “father” is always haunted by nightmares of being plotted against, and images of his “children” planning to illegally remove him.

These are the signs and symptoms of a man whose mind has become unsettled due to fear of reprisals for his actions against his own “children” and will, indeed, forever live in unbridled fear, surrounded by “prison walls.”

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