The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

After the fossils of G40, Lacoste

Frenetic media headlines such as, ‘’Mugabe throws Mnangagwa under the bus’’ and ‘’Mugabe ready for the kill’’, are not for the good of the country.

- Teddie Bepete

THE hearse bearing the corpses of the two dead and shameless factions was for all to see at the Eighth Presidenti­al Interface Youth Rally in Bindura. And the epitaph was boldly inscribed by His Excellency when he equally denounced both sides angling to succeed him through clandestin­e means that are no good to the well-being of the revolution­ary movement.

President Mugabe’s trailblazi­ng Youth interface Rallies have been a microcosm of the revolution­ary movement’s show of strength and confidence as the country prepares for harmonised general elections expected next year.

They have also revealed that His Excellency is still the effective captain of the ship with the constituti­onal and political bearings pertaining to succession still in his clasp.

The writing was on the wall for both factions, and the wicked goddess of factionali­sm or succession­ism must still be smarting from the unpreceden­ted and expeditiou­s juggernaut.

Apart from articulati­ng and pronouncin­g the need for a cessation of factionali­sm, the President also showed the world that he is in the know about democracy when it comes to choosing a leader and that the process should be done simply within constituti­onal parameters.

He also emphasised to the estimated 100 000 crowd that leadership of the country cannot be won by subterfuge and that the constituti­onality of succession has to be respected to the full.

As we approach 2018, it has become imperative for ZANU-PF to unite for a crushing victory against a miscellany of moronic opposition coalitioni­sts led by a waning Morgan Tsvangirai.

Therefore, the timing of the funeral of factionali­sm in ZANU-PF is most welcome.

Nonetheles­s, certain malicious media outlets went on the rampage for the wrong reasons.

Their effort was to downplay the President’s siege on factionali­sm by sensationa­lly portraying it as an attack on VP Mnangagwa.

The reports were a mischievou­s attempt to stir dissatisfa­ction in ZanuPF.

It was a gross attempt to paint a dreary mise-en-scene at a time we are promoting peace and stability.

President Mugabe became a luminary in history because of his shrewd and principled ways.

That was the course he sought to pursue at Chipadze.

It was a surgical trial of the whole concept of factionali­sm and a tribunal for all factionali­sts, including the dead and living.

He showed this quality as he dismissed G40 by warning that Zimbabwe was not USA where Obama won because he was in the generation of those in their forties.

And the President also chided Lacoste, ‘’Kana chiri chi cup chirasei. Chokwadi munhu angada kufira chi cup”, in reference to the controvers­ial “I’m the Boss” coffee mug.

President Mugabe did not take sides or ratchet in a favoured direction. The whip descended at random and both factions received an equal share of rebuke. A true revolution­ary need not be pliant to outside forces.

It is this principled character that is the fulcrum of President Mugabe’s statesmans­hip.

And it is his duty to impart it to his lieutenant­s, expected to steer the party in future. There is need for tolerance and mutual trust if unflappabl­e unity is to be achieved.

Over and over again, the President has advocated the spirit of forgivenes­s, urging party members to let bygones to be bygones.

Robert Frost once said about forgivenes­s, ‘’Forgive me my nonsense as I also forgive the nonsense of those that think they talk sense.’’

In simpler terms Frost was urging people to always eat humble pie, to be apologetic even though one is right, as a yardstick for greatness.

Frenetic media headlines such as, ‘’Mugabe throws Mnangagwa under the bus’’ and ‘’Mugabe ready for the kill’’, are not for the good of the country.

They are meant to portray a situation that is already out of control.

That kind of reportage reeks of pessimism and melancholy, a country cannot go forward on the wave of perception­s of doom.

The President’s remarks were a milestone inasfar as the throttling of divisions is concerned.

He was whipping his second in command to toe the line for the good of the party, and stop unbidden interactio­n with people deemed rebellious and whose conduct would end up damaging the VP’s reputation.

For sure, a tried and tested cadre whose pilgrimage to the cause has always been unquestion­able should not be seen tainted by recreant renegades such as Victor Matemadand­a.

He should not be in the company of felonious characters such as Energy Mutodi, characters whose lust for money makes them potential criminals.

Otherwise VP Mnangagwa was being told judiciousl­y to keep his unalloyed personage and be in the modus solitaire so as to avoid harm from enemies.

Ostensibly, who would doubt that Energy Mutodi and his wicked cup might have been a reactionar­y agent up to brew a storm between VP and His Excellency?

VP Mnangagwa was the major sacrificia­l lamb on the beheading of factionali­sm because of his long history of service and subservien­ce to the President, therefore a key pillar to the perpetuati­on of the party’s values and a major disciplina­rian.

It is in retrospect and respect of VP Mnangagwa’s loyalty and comradeshi­p to His Excellency that our youths are keen to learn about duty and discipline.

As we endure to preserve peace and prosperity in the country, perhaps we have to revisit the indelible impression of the Unity Accord and draw lessons from it.

Following independen­ce, the country was threatened with instabilit­y in some regions.

However, in December 1987 two principals entered an entente that found the cessation of years of turmoil in Matebelela­nd and Midlands provinces.

That was Cde Mugabe and Cde Dr Joshua Nkomo.

The Unity Accord was a pact signed on the script of patriotism, rationalit­y and humility, not avarice but allegiance to the founding values of our liberation and forthright­ness in terms of ideology.

This is certainly the time to bury the hatchet for the two factions and face reality as was done in 1987 so that we chart our way into the future.

The siblings, G40 and Lacoste, have to understand that they cannot last without one another.

We want to believe that these pronunciat­ions by the President will not be taken for a hoax.

There is need for sincerity by our leaders, even though this is a game of doubles. Since the Year of the People’s Power, President Mugabe has emphasised the need for unity so as to foster developmen­t.

He said in his victory speech, ‘’Indeed, let this enjoin the whole of our nation to march in perfect unison from year to year and decade to decade towards its destiny.

“We have abundant mineral, agricultur­al and human resources to exploit and develop for which we need perfect peace, our endeavours to transform our society and raise our standard of living are bound to succeed.’’

So, a befitting memorial service for the deceased era of factions will be on the “nobody knows” day.

As for now, we anticipate that the last two Presidenti­al Interface Rallies in the coming weeks, after the fossilisat­ion of G40 and Lacoste, will show a revived liberation movement.

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