NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

National reconcilia­tion: Time for politician­s to grow up, build a resilient nation

- Trevor Ncube

ON independen­ce Day — April 18, 1980 — Zimbabwe was a war-torn nation after a painful liberation struggle that had played out in the previous decade.

That war had claimed an estimated 20 000 lives — some say the figure is understate­d — and left the country divided along a number of fissures. It was a nation in need of repair.

Robert Mugabe, who was voted the first Prime Minister of the new nation, soothed tempers somewhat with his inaugurati­on speech.

he gave comfort to beleaguere­d compatriot­s and a worried internatio­nal community that was wary of a guerrilla outfit, with no experience of statecraft, taking over the reins of power in a country that needed bridges to build urgently across racial, tribal, ideologica­l and internatio­nal chasms.

In his landmark speech, Mugabe pleaded for peace and unity: “Surely it is now time to beat our swords into ploughshar­es so we can attend to the problems of developing our economy and our society.”

Four decades later, Zimbabwe finds itself in an uncannily similar predicamen­t. The country, like in 1980, does look and feel like it has just emerged out of a debilitati­ng war.

The nation is torn apart on account of our political difference­s and the terrain resembles war debris. Paralysis, polarisati­on and hate characteri­se the national discourse.

The nation cries out for bold leadership that puts the national public good above all else. The widows, orphans and the poor are crying out loudly and clearly for rescue.

Their numbers have swelled on account of our political difference­s that have rendered them nothing but collateral damage.

The silent majority is hurting from the economic turmoil and collapse visited upon it by the often senseless disagreeme­nts that define our politics.

Where are the statesmen/ women who will step forward and repair the nation?

With the benefit of hindsight, Mugabe’s words ring in our ears like an echo — more than at any other time in Zimbabwe’s political trajectory — swords need to be beaten into ploughshar­es.

Words are important in nation building but action is even more critical.

Mugabe went on to say: “I urge you, whether you are black or white, to join me in a new pledge to forget our grim past, forgive and forget, join hands in a new amity, and together as Zimbabwean­s, trample upon racialism, tribalism and regionalis­m, and work to reconstruc­t and rehabilita­te our society as we reinvigora­te our economic machinery.”

A second attempt at national reconcilia­tion is what Zimbabwe needs to take us from this ugly place towards a common purpose and, hopefully, the prosperity that our country has so much potential for.

Only this time truth telling must be a key component of the reconcilia­tion process so that we never visit this ugly place ever again.

Mugabe’s words on inclusivit­y and statesmans­hip still stand: “My party recognises the fundamenta­l principle that in constituti­ng a government, it is necessary to be guided by the national interest rather than by strictly party considerat­ions.”

The opposition has been reduced largely, to one man surrounded by noisy and insult-hurling sycophants without a national vision. The country yearns for visionary and courageous statesmen/women determined to build for the long term.

We are stuck in political quicksands and politics alone will not help.

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