NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

ED’s great deception

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

PRESIDENT Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa is playing the smokes and mirrors game with Zimbabwean­s. He knows how to throw a ruse and distract his audience. This time, he played another trick on the electorate when he launched the “performanc­e-based contracts” for Cabinet ministers, permanent secretarie­s and chief executives of State-owned enterprise­s.

The Office of the President and Cabinet (OPC) last weekend started flighting full-page adverts in the State-controlled media on the new “innovation” — performanc­e-based contracts for senior civil servants and chief executives at parastatal­s.

This is a well-orchestrat­ed move as the country moves towards the 2023 general elections. A move that will blind and sidestep the electorate to think he is a man of action.

Let us for a moment go back to his short history post-November 2017 coup to establish his modus operandi.

Mnangagwa in his inaugurati­on speech spoke like a true Statesman. He promised that the past was gone and Zimbabwe was walking into a new chapter — a chapter he termed the second republic, a chapter he promised to mend the economy, create jobs, decisively deal with corruption, respect the rule of law and ensure that Zimbabwe rejoins the community of nations such as the Commonweal­th.

He came out of the block quicker than Usain Bolt on the issue of externalis­ation.

His office published a list of local and foreign companies and individual­s who allegedly externalis­ed millions of foreign currency.

In an accompanyi­ng statement, Mnangagwa said he gave companies and individual­s three months to repatriate the funds to Zimbabwe. Neutral observers said he was on the correct path, but this was before China issued a statement in response.

China denied its citizens or companies had externalis­ed. The Asian giant asked for further particular­s and in a subtle way, reminded Mnangagwa who had kept Zimbabwe on its feet in the past two decades, when the West imposed economic sanctions on it.

After the three months lapsed, Mnangagwa did not say anything and the matter of foreign currency externalis­ation died a natural death. Mnangagwa proved to have a loud bark without a bite.

On corruption, Mnangagwa did the same. He establishe­d the Special Anti-Corruption Unit housed in the OPC.

Nearly four years after its establishm­ent, it struggles to show its success. In simpler terms, the unit has not had any successful highprofil­e conviction to talk about.

Mnangagwa, as a face saver, long after citizens complained, finally threw Health minister Obadiah Moyo to the wolves, but he received five-star treatment and many were left wondering if he had been arrested because he was out before one could call out “corruption is killing Zimbabwe”.

On the rule of law, Mnangagwa has to date passed two constituti­onal amendments.

Ironically, both amendments substantiv­ely took Zimbabwe back in time — back to the imperial presidency of 1987.

The President now has power to appoint the Chief Justice and Deputy Chief Justice, Prosecutor-General without having them subjected to interviews as the 2013 Constituti­on had envisioned.

The other amendment removed the running mate clause, and now allows the President to promote judges high up the bench without interviews and watered down devolution. So much for the new dispensati­on.

Command agricultur­e has remained a conduit for siphoning State resources.

In the November 2021 debt statement tabled by Finance minister Mthuli Ncube, farmers’ repayment rate is at 15% and yet the debt has been guaranteed by the State.

Back to the performanc­e-based contracts, why now? It is ironic because the President has power to fire any minister even without a reason.

Mnangagwa has so far fired two ministers, Moyo and Owen Ncube (State Security), this did not need this newly-launched performanc­e-based contract.

Parastatal­s have boards where the chief executives report to. Is it a tacit concession by the President that the boards appointed to run parastatal­s are incompeten­t and mere window-dressers that he now needs chief executives to be accountabl­e to him?

In the new programme, these senior officers will be evaluated on four main things: Delivery, efficacy, management and implementa­tion.

It begs the question that Mnangagwa has chosen to go public about the evaluation criteria, it is important for him to take into confidence the public about the duties and targets that these officers are expected to do be also made public.

Failure to put these documents into the public domain will expose the performanc­e-based contracts move as a mere public relations stunt, where Mnangagwa wants to be seen to be doing something.

It is interestin­g to note that Mnangagwa as an afterthoug­ht in his fourth year as he decided that permanent secretarie­s and chief executives need to have their performanc­e appraised annually.

The first appraisal is due only two months before a general election in 2023.

What effect will wielding the axe have on under-performing senior officers at the end of his term?

A ruse to the electorate that he means business and get re-elected and most probably reappoint them after elections?

Mnangagwa is creating a diversion for the public not to evaluate his performanc­e in his first term and make secretarie­s and chief executives his scapegoats.

The question is: Have Mnangagwa delivered on his manifesto? Did he create jobs?

Has the energy supplies improved? Has health service improved? Is there quality and affordable education? And has the roads infrastruc­ture improved?

The answer is simple: Mnangagwa has largely failed to deliver on his promises and most likely will further fail even in his second term because the economic model he is choosing does not address the things in his manifesto.

Privatisat­ion of services is antipoor and therefore the majority of Zimbabwean­s.

That is why Mnangagwa is fixated with quantitati­ve and not qualitativ­e measuremen­ts.

The man has failed, no matter how many mirrors he puts in front of the public.

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