NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Old habits die hard

- Cyprian M Ndawana Read full article on www.newsday. co.zw Cyprian Muketiwa Ndawana is a public speaking coach, motivation­al speaker, speechwrit­er and newspaper columnist. He can be contacted on email muketiwa. mmsb@gmail.com.

DEAR President Emmerson Mnangagwa Your Excellency, as Bulawayo hosted the 42nd independen­ce anniversar­y, one thing for certain is that there was apparent resentment all over. Ordinarily, there was supposed to be merriment. But, the unsettled Gukurahund­i massacres cast a dark cloud that stretched far and wide, well beyond the City of Kings and Queens.

As I see it, there is more to the incident in which an Airforce of Zimbabwe officer was injured during rehearsals than a mere technical mishap. Methinks, it was an indication of the festering disappoint­ment and anxiety that abounds not only among citizenry, but the in spirits of the region as well.

Your Excellency, it is inobjectio­nable that government has long been moving at the pace of a donkey-drawn cart on the unresolved Gukurahund­i atrocities. There is no sense of urgency on its part, neither is there empathy. It has been business as usual, with total disregard for the pepertual emotional torment of the victims.

Described flippantly as a moment of madness by the deposed late former President Robert Mugabe, the Gukurahund­i massacres have always been a source of national glum. Although they were unleashed in the Midlands and Matabelela­nd provinces, the country in its entirety felt the pain.

Your Excellency, Mugabe had an unrepentan­t attitude towards the massacres. He stubbornly refused to place in the public arena the official report he commission­ed, which was chaired by a High Court Judge. He was also dismissive of an Amnesty Internatio­nal report.

He cast aspersions on it, demeaning it as a heap of lies. Yet, true to the report, State-sanctioned torture was widespread and persistent. His unceremoni­ous deposal, which took days, could not actuate him to dignify his departure by opening up on the atrocities.

It was in keeping with Mugabe’s mean spirited nature that the massacres were recently referred to as one of the small issues that the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission was working on. The remark was devoid of a human face.

As if the utterance was not sufficient­ly arrogant, you also chipped in with the audacity to accuse the opposition and civil society groups of using the unresolved Gukurahund­i atrocities to stir emotions.

Sadly, the ongoing travesty on the resolution of the atrocities is only but one of the shorter ends of the burning stick which government is extending to the Matabelela­nd region. It is inconsider­ate that the post of second Vice-President has been vacant for over a year.

Your Excellency, It is a preserve for former Zimbabwe African Peoples Union cadres enshrined in the Unity Accord of 1987. Indeed, it is a blatant derelictio­n of considerat­ion for the letter and spirit of the agreement that the post has been vacant for such a long time.

Methinks, it is due to the presidency’s sentimenta­l attachment to the past that Zimbabwe continues to be afflicted by socio-economic woes. As I see it, your adherence to the old and familiar raises a stench that scares away internatio­nal investors.

Despite almost five years of benefit of the doubt extended to you, it emerged that you are steeped in a dogged devotion to the past. Ever since the fall of Mugabe, there is evidence galore that you are an embodiment of his traits.

Actually, no leader who assumed the Presidency by unorthodox means as you did received internatio­nal greenlight. Granted, your ascendancy was aided by the military, yet, the internatio­nal community nonetheles­s welcomed you on board.

Essentiall­y, it was my fervent prayer that a departure from the old was the ideal route you were bound to pursue. If ever there was one thing I anticipate­d with bated breath, it was the remorseful denunciati­on of the untoward actions of the past.

lt was my profound plea to the Almighty that you would be your own man. Despite you having been a key player during the 38 oppressive years in which violence and brutality were unleashed on citizenry, I had benevolent expectatio­ns of you forsaking the ingrained norm of iron fist rule.

Your Excellency, when you pledged to be a soft as wool President, you won me to your corner. But, sooner rather than later, you turned out to be stern. It was in no time that you showed your true nature when you did not waste time to grab the keys to the armoury.

With the August 1 2018 shootings in Harare and subsequent ones in January 2019, you showed your inclinatio­n towards Mugabe’s way of doing things. There was no hesitation­s whatsover when you let loose the military on citizenry.

Your Excellency, like Mugabe before you, you have failed to make headway not only in the resolution of the Gukurahund­i issue, but on the removal of targeted sanctions, combating corruption, upholding tenets of democracy and attracting investment, to mention but the key areas.

Apparently, your Presidency has proven to be devoid of propitious strategies.

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