The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zimbabwe: A loyal, fearless neighbour

The people of Mozambique are grateful that President Mugabe and ZANU-PF were extremely vocal concerning the reopening of the investigat­ion concerning the mysterious death of Comrade Samora Machel, whose plane crashed between Mozambique and South Africa on

- Obi Egbuna Jnr Simunye

BECAUSE Mother Africa and her scattered yet ever so resilient children are only a few days celebratin­g Mozambique’s independen­ce, our experience­s as a people along with our historical reality forces us to make a clear distinctio­n between precise scientific reflection and bogus revisionis­m that does nothing to strengthen and preserve the African personalit­y.

The great pan-Africanist revolution­ary, Kwame Ture, would always remind our former colonial and slavemaste­rs that African people are not racist simply because we do not possess the power to be racist. Following that same logic we can make a rock solid argument that we cannot be revisionis­t especially since reclaiming our lost history and culture is an obligation we do not have the luxury of ignoring.

Since the millennium our sisters and brothers in the southern region of Africa have been subjected to an unrelentin­g barrage of propaganda, encouragin­g at both the government­al and people-to-people levels, an allout isolation of Zimbabwe that would make them ever so vulnerable to the illegal and immoral regime change agenda being spearheade­d by US-EU imperialis­m.

On the one hand, due to the fact that when it comes to political developmen­ts in Mother Africa, US-EU imperialis­m has always benefited from divide and conquer tactics, it comes as no surprise that regardless of their obvious failures to turn the SADC region against President Mugabe and ZANU-PF they remain committed to the longterm goal which is regime change at all costs.

The imperialis­ts pay close attention to ZANU-PF, Frelimo, Swapo and the MPLA hoping to find a neo-colonialis­t reactionar­y the likes of Hourari Boumdeine in Algeria, Blaise Compaore in Burkina Faso, Lasana Conte in Guinee and Mobutu Sese Seko in the Congo, who earned the trust of the revolution­ary icons they helped our enemies oust from power.

When we think of the two revolution­ary giants that the Mozambican revolution produced Comrades Eduardo Mondlane, the founding president of Frelimo; and Samora Machel, Mozambique’s first president; it is without question that their revolution­ary fervour jumps off the pages written about them. However, the manner both of these warriors approached solidarity validates the pan-African sentiment that in the final analysis we are truly one people with one history and purpose.

Whether we focus on the decision that Frelimo made to provide ZANU a guerilla station at the height of their protracted armed struggle against the Portuguese, speaks volumes about the fire that burned in the belly of not only Frelimo’s revolution­ary leadership but the everyday Mozambican people as well.

Africans at home and abroad must pay close attention to the propaganda slant of both the Bush and Obama administra­tions, who both stated publically that while Zimbabwe was a small nation it provided a rather unique problem pertaining to US interests in the region.

What this dynamic created by circumstan­ce was desperatio­n on the part of US-EU imperialis­m to magnify any language by SADC leaders or visible figures, that suggested it was time for President Mugabe and ZANU-PF to step aside and let MDC assume the mantle of power.

We remember former Mozambican president Comrade Joaquim Chissano stated he would not seek a third term and voiced his concerns about SADC leaders who had stayed on longer than he had, which ironically was the same year that US-EU imperialis­m imposed the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act (Zidera) of 2001.

This feeble attempt to paint a picture that Frelimo was ready to embrace the US-EU regime agenda as it pertained to Zimbabwe was not only laughable, but a rather presumptio­us dispositio­n that illustrate­d that they thought the youth of Mozambique had not been taught that after Zimbabwe’s independen­ce, President Mugabe and ZANU-PF deployed 50 000 guerrilla fighters to help Frelimo defeat the CIA- supported Renamo on the battlefiel­d. What President Mugabe and ZANU-PF showed the African world was not only how true revolution­aries show gratitude not only in word but by deed.

The people of Mozambique are grateful that President Mugabe and ZANU-PF were extremely vocal concerning the reopening of the investigat­ion concerning the mysterious death of Comrade Samora Machel, whose plane crashed between Mozambique and South Africa on October 19 1986.

While Zimbabwean­s were deeply hurt when Botswana’s Ian Khama stated that if US-EU imperialis­m considered a military invasion of Zimbabwe, he would make Botswana’s territory available for our sworn enemies to carry out this cowardly and terrorist act.

Whatever frame of mind President Khama was in when he entertaine­d assisting Mother Africa’s former colonisers and enslavers, we are sure someone reminded him about the meaning of his father’s first name, Seretse, that means the clay that binds us together. It is disappoint­ing that President Khama appears to have forgotten that the former Zimbabwean ambassador to the US, Dr Simbi Mubako, helped Botswana draft its constituti­on.

This ungrateful posture exhibited by President Khama was matched by the former First Lady of Mozambique and South Africa, Graca Machel Mandela, who decided to be part of the Elders Group financed by the founder and CEO of Virgin Airlines, Sir Richard Branson, when they attempted to force their way into Zimbabwe under the guise of a fact-finding mission.

We wonder if Sister Machel-Mandela ever told this high-profile delegation consisting of Madiba Nelson Mandela, former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, former US president Jimmy Carter, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu, that President Mugabe and ZANU-PF saved her life when the Portugese and Renamo had plans to place her six feet under next to her late husband.

During the GPA/inclusive Government the people of Zimbabwe will never forget how the government of Namibia took it upon itself, to travel to Washington and walk the halls of the US Senate and Congress, demanding that US-EU sanctions on Zimbabwe be lifted once and for all.

This showed that our comrades in Namibia have never forgotten that during the final phase of their Independen­ce struggle, Zimbabwe was the Chair of the Non-Aligned Movement and played a crucial role in ensuring on the diplomatic front nothing would stand in the way of the Namibian people gaining their well-deserved sovereignt­y.

A valuable resource for the youth of Zimbabwe and Namibia in particular and Africans in general is Namibia’s independen­ce struggle written by the Zimbabwean diplomat, Cleophas Johannes Tsokodayi, who was Deputy Head of Mission at Zimbabwe’s UN Mission during this period.

The people of Zimbabwe were pleased to see former Namibia president Comrade Sam Nujoma for standing shoulder to shoulder with President Mugabe when the epic Third Chimurenga was initially launched. ◆ Full article on www.herald.co.zw

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