Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Anti-Masiyiwa rants smack of political immaturity, petty jealousy

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SINCE the Zimbabwean telecommun­ications mogul Strive Masiyiwa donated US$10 million towards the fight against the cholera outbreak in Harare and other centres in September last year and declared two months later that the prevailing regime of sanctions against Zimbabwe should be removed, he has suffered several verbal and cyber attacks from largely anti-Government elements in the society. What seems to have angered most of his attackers, and those from the opposition, is his descriptio­n of President Emmerson Mnangagwa as sincere in his economic turnaround efforts. All along they thought that he was one of them and his perceived volte-face really incensed them.

Systematic attacks

The attacks against Masiyiwa are part of a systematic onslaught on all alternativ­e voices of people who have come to the realisatio­n that the opposition has been a failure since 1999 and that chances of it landing power are getting slimmer with each passing day especially given the kind of leadership which is now at its helm. The attacks have also exposed petty jealousy on the part of some failed businessme­n who strangely think that Zanu-PF or Government owe them something.

Even lightweigh­t opposition figures such as the MDC Kuwadzana legislator, Chalton Hwende also hung out his brains for Zimbabwe to see their insides when he called for a boycott of Econet Wireless in retaliatio­n for Masiyiwa’s position on the new dispensati­on and the need to remove sanctions. Progressiv­e Zimbabwean­s showed him how petty and hare-brained his idea was and he ended up shamefully pulling down the Econet boycott tweet.

MDC activist, anti-Government detractor and Human Rights Watch employee, Dewa Mavhinga who was part of the December 2017 opposition delegation which travelled to the United States to appeal for the extension of sanctions against Zimbabwe among other things was obviously miffed by Masiyiwa’s stance. He led the cyber-bullying of Masiyiwa’s wife, Tsitsi last December. The attackers relentless­ly haunted and hounded the Masiyiwas until the couple ended up being forced to close their twitter accounts.

A surprise attack on Masiyiwa was the one mounted by the South Africa-based failed businessma­n, Mutumwa Mawere who hosted former Zanu-PF Masvingo Chairman and G40 element, Daniel Shumba who made sensationa­l claims that the telecommun­ications billionair­e was funding his (Shumba’s) wife to divorce him. Shumba stated that the reason for the alleged funding of his wife by Masiyiwa was that he (Shumba) was in possession of recordings of how Masiyiwa stole Econet Wireless shares in connivance with former banker, Nigel Chanakira.

Eddie Cross

The Econet Wireless founder and chairman has not been alone in this predicamen­t. When former opposition politician and economist, Edward Cross broke ranks with the MDC’s anti-Zanu PF stance early in 2018 and opined that the new dispensati­on had ushered in investor confidence, he was hauled over the coals by members of the MDC for taking a position, which is constituti­onally guaranteed by the supreme law of the land, the Constituti­on, and eventually retired from active politics.

Trevor Ncube

Another victim of the MDC and other people who are bitter with President Mnangagwa’s 30 July win and administra­tion is Alpha Media Holdings (AMH) owner, Trevor Ncube. Ncube is among the prominent people who supportede­d the late Morgan Tsvangirai in 1999 whenhen the MDC was founded. Since May 1996996 his weekly and, later, daily papers werere very critical of Government. When President resident Mnangagwa assumed power in November vember 2017, he immediatel­y supported him and his administra­tion.

When AMH was granted radioio and television licences in September lastast year the attacks against Ncube even worsened orsened with some accusing him of “selling out” by supporting the President and Government rnment for a licence. People such as the self-f-exiled fugitive, Professor Jonathan Moyoo even made lies and unproven insinuatio­n ation that the President was an undeclared lared shareholde­r in Ncube’s empire.

Obert Gutu

Since parting ways with the MDCC to form the MDC-T Khupe faction, Obert bert Gutu has been behaving, speaking ng and tweeting like a progressiv­e ve Zimbabwean. Despite being an opposition leader, unlike his former mer colleagues in the Chamisa faction, his words have been promotive of the greater good of Zimbabwean­s and for that he has invited the irrational ire of people such as Hwende who attack him at every turn.

The pettiness of the attackers

An analysis of some of the Masiyiwa attackers reveals the petty jealousy of some failed businesspe­ople, the naivety of some so-called opposition figures and the bitterness of those whose political careers and grand plans came crashing around them in November 2017.

Like the MDC that he supports, Mavhinga survives on the suffering of the people of Zimbabwe. Instrument­s such as sanctions which prop up their enterprise are very dear to them and anyone who supports their removal is bound to be viciously attacked to protect their means of getting Western purses opened for them.

Hwende is a known Nelson Chamisa worshipper. He literary sings praises of the very ground that Chamisa walks on. In the process of trying to earn pats from the MDC leader, Hwende ends up tripping himself on many an occasion forcing him to routinely retract some of his social media messages which expose his poor political mettle and judgement. Some people say he is a small time businesspe­rson but he has not even donated a thousand dollars to the people who voted for him, if ever he has, we await to know. His baseless attack against Masiyiwa betrays his petty jealousy of the billionair­e.

Hwende is representa­tive of the political naivety of the opposition who believe that their opponents should be everyone’s enemy. Yes, Masiyiwa was aggrieved by the previous administra­tion which denied him an operating licence for two years. It is the former President Robert Mugabe and his then Minister of Informatio­n, Posts and Telecommun­ications, Joyce Mujuru who did that and not President Mnangagwa. His fight was with Mugabe and not Zanu-PF. Even if it was President Mnangagwa, Masiyiwa has a right to move from the past and embrace the present without some failed opposition playing chaperon on him. Although he remains apolitical, by standing with Zimbabwean­s he has demonstrat­ed that he is a better “politician” than all the opposition combined.

What can one say of the failed business duo of Mawere and Shumba? Mawere’s empire was not just the two asbestos mines which he claims he was dispossess­ed by the previous administra­tion. The fact that all other entities lie tucked in the Zimbabwean business graveyard foreground­s his failure and his beef against Masiyiwa is therefore mere petty jealousy.

When Masiyiwa set out in business he was a then Posts and Telecommun­ications (PTC) employee. Around 1993 he approached his employer for a partnershi­p to set up a mobile telephone business but he was turned down. In 2002 Shumba’s TeleAccess, which used the promising tagline, “Now you can,” was licensed to compete with one of PTC successor entities, TelOne but the venture failed to take off despite abundant funding from CBZ Bank and the National Social Security Authority (NSSA).

Given this scenario where Econet Wireless is now a global corporate behemoth while TeleAcces failed dismally one cannot help but pick a tinge of jealousy in Shumba’s charges against Masiyiwa. As for Prof Jonathan Moyo, it is a public secret that he nurses a grudge against President Mnangagwa over the latter’s scuttling of the G40 succession plan in Zanu-PF. Anyone who recognises and praises the President and his administra­tion naturally becomes a target of his vile but unjustifie­d attacks.

Notwithsta­nding the unnecessar­y attacks on the President and progressiv­e Zimbabwean­s such as

Masiyiwa, Ncube,

Gutu and Cross among others, the country’s fortunes are definitely going to turn around and lives are going to improve.

 ??  ?? Strive Masiyiwa
Strive Masiyiwa
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