Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Change is a process; not an event

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ONE of the difficult things to do these days is to talk with authority on anything to do with reform in Zimbabwe.

Somehow Zimbabwean­s are no longer expected to have any deep understand­ing of their own situation or even themselves so to say while other people have become authoritie­s on all aspects of what a new Zimbabwe should mean or to be more accurate on the definition of reform.

If it is not someone with his anti-establishm­ent compositio­ns, it is someone with condescend­ing and reactionar­y legal theories.

Wait, did I leave out the champions of compensato­ry tendencies, I mean the ones, when asked to justify most of their claims are rather quick to declare where they have been or which big shot they had dinner with and their alma mater university!.

These and other cyber generals with their online crusaders have outgrown their opinions from being but just their opinions; into mistaking themselves as sources of truth on what is good for Zimbabwe.

I ask myself why it has not shocked anyone that these so called voices of the market space have never even once agreed or found value in any policy initiative spirited by the Government of Zimbabwe.

By way of clarificat­ion, let me point out that I am not insinuatin­g that the Government is always right and hence its initiative­s should always be celebrated, but the point that I am driving home is that it is practicall­y impossible for the Government to be always wrong as how these gate keepers of change would want us to believe.

It has become pretty obvious to us that these are crucial years in the history of Zimbabwe.

It is a period where we are not only acknowledg­ing our misfortune as a nation but rather a phase where we are actively tackling some of our biggest hurdles to national progress.

Beyond the colonial legacy and the internatio­nal capitalist conspiracy, Zimbabwe has also found itself in the jaws of corruption.

Very often the fight against corruption is hijacked by career activists who don’t speak about corruption for the purpose of ending it, but do so in an attempt to scandalise the establishm­ent and or the rejuvenati­on of their sinking political careers.

Fortunatel­y or unfortunat­ely, the waves of reform which have been sweeping down the face of Africa have reached our very borders. There is no more doubt about the inevitabil­ity of reform this time around; the only questions now remaining are how and when.

Actually, the question of “when” can be traced to a certain Zanu-PF rally sometime in March 2018 in which thousands of people from across Zimbabwe gathered to listen to President ED Mnangagwa elucidate a much more profound theoretica­l handle to grapple the question of corruption and the setting of a new trajectory for Zimbabwe’s administra­tive politics.

While everyone was still “engulfed” in the “Kutonga Kwaro” beat;the President of Zimbabwe ED Mnangagwa ambushed the audience with a rather unusual slogan.

To everyone’s surprise, the slogan placed a lot of emphasis on the fight against corruption.

As he chanted “pasi ne-corruption!” for the third time, thousands of clenched fists punched the air approving to the said message.

At the core of this slogan was the vision to unravel a future that is neither pro-political party-X nor political party-Y, but rather a more nationally based craft to dismantle the jaws of corruption.

In more thoughtful terms, this was a rain making ceremony of consolidat­ing all the political will to tackling the question of corruption. Subsequent to that rally, the President slapped Zimbabwe with a shocking list of companies externalis­ing funds.

This led to the emergence of anticorrup­tion voices throughout society but spearheade­d by notable stakeholde­rs namely the Government and or the State which later radicalise­d its echelons in favour of anticorrup­tion efforts.

It is therefore in this context that Zimbabwe has seen cases like the conundrous “list” of suspected corrupt individual­s, the Chiri Report and consequent­ly the 28 points of fighting corruption by Justice Loice Matanda Moyo the Zacc chairperso­n.

Followed by the ground breaking Chiri Report, it is also clear that the anticorrup­tion crusade is being appositely accepted even in Government ranks.

The democratic space that has been created by the new dispensati­on has seen even the operationa­lisation of significan­t Government institutio­ns like the AuditorGen­eral’s office which was previously incapacita­ted one way or another.

Its ability to craft and deliver such an elaborate report reflects not only the change in the civil service culture, but it also resonates with the President’s call for ethical and corporate governance.

The contents of the Chiri Report that is the names and institutio­ns implicated in maladminis­tration; reverberat­e the Government’s commitment to an accountabl­e and transparen­t order of governance, it even speaks to the Presidium’s call that “there won’t be any sacred cows” in the fight against corruption.

Interestin­gly, if given a closer look, the events taking place now can either be traced to the November 2017 when the collective scream by every Zimbabwean was to root out corruption or Zimbabwe’s general legislativ­e framework hence reaching the conclusion that Zimbabwe is defining a new policy attitude.

As if that is not enough, the appointmen­t of a renowned legal expert, Justice Loice Matanda Moyo to steer Zacc, only attests to the Government’s commitment to the subject of reform.

Justice Matanda Moyo in her 28 points of fighting corruption has demonstrat­ed the judiciary’s seriousnes­s in fighting corruption.

What is striking about these 28 points is that they manage to offer a horizontal cleavage between and within the principles of separation of powers, the newly found attitude of governance and the need for State arms to remain closely linked to the broader national policy aspiration­s.

The only fundamenta­l left is us acknowledg­ing that change is not an event, instead it is a gradual process with multidimen­sional necessitie­s and performanc­es. Therefore, just like sand in the hour glass, so are the days of corruption.

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