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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

A revolution that lost its course – Mugabe at 88


By Tabani Moyo

In the state owned weekly, The Sunday Mail of February 19 – 25, 2012 President Mugabe was asked, “We are told there are groups in ZANU PF positioning themselves to succeed you. Are you aware of such groups?” His answer, was little bit mind blowing to the level heads, “Those you cannot avoid. But, they are not serious. All the people (to say all is to be too absolute) support that I stand. There is no one who can stand and win at the moment… you have got to groom a candidate. You can’t just get someone and put them in the forefront. You must groom a successor.” 

This is the thinking of the man who has been at the helm of the country’s leadership for the past 32 years. His commends speaks of a lost revolutionary course. It seems as if the president has come to know of the need to groom a successor at the age of 88. To him it looks like if he is not in the equation or the matrix of political happenings the country will grind to an abrupt stop. 

In his 1979, Unity and Struggle, Amilcar Cabral is quoted saying that, “We must avoid the obsession of some comrades that everything is spoiled, everything is over if they should leave the posting where they are. Nobody is indispensible in this struggle; we are all needed but nobody is indispensible. If someone has to go and goes away and then the struggle is paralysed, it is because the struggle was worthless… this is without mentioning cases of other comrades who think when they are transferred, they are going to die, because they have already established all conditions for working in one spot and are called upon to go to another. What blindness! As if our land were just a little corner! This shows a lack of awareness of the real reason, the aim and characteristics of our struggle.”   

If our liberation struggle which Zanu PF played a pivotal role, was anchored on revolutionary thinking, the party itself was founded on revolutionising the nation and its founding, the country would not be stuck with a leader celebrating 88 years in office.  Our revolution was founded on the principles of dismantling the colonial yoke, giving the citizens that right to be human and making choices in a freed nation and above all defining our nationhood. This definition includes freely choosing its leadership, living in peace, human advancement in all faculties and a peace of mind.
As Cabral noted, the revolution lost its course as seen by how the citadels of the president are stepping on each others’ toes splashing close to a million dollars in celebrating one man’s birthday. If it was an independence celebration ceremony held across the country’s ten political provinces, we could have spared this critique. But no, it’s not a national event.
no one in Zanu is capable of winning?
The president posits an oxymoron statement that no one is capable of winning in his party. Though it is free knowledge that ZANU PF is no longer capable of winning anything worth competing for, he believes that he is God given. This is depicted at a level of brazenly coming out in the public saying that no one can offset competing offerings and secondly through deliberately stifling the open debate on succession, which entails that he wants to end his life in the public spheres of life.

His concubines cannot read the lines on the walls. They cannot smell the big rat in the house even when they are clearly aware of the fact that they made Robert Mugabe through posting him to the position he holds. That making of Mugabe was squarely rooted on the national ethos of creating a state that is responsive to the national needs. When he was posted, there was absolutely no thinking that one day we will dedicate our creative facilities through songs and dance to perfect his stay in power. 

At any given time we need to remind each other of the fact that the nation is convince that he is no longer a public good. He is no longer the best person to carry the national fleg at both domestic and international for a. This is given the fact that times have changed. That’s why he is angry at everyone from within his party as exposed by wikileaks, the nation for voting against his candidature in 2008, SADC for pushing for reforms and the AU for recognizing the new Lybian government. Times have changed comrade President!  
  
a true revolution never runs out of leaders

A clear case of well thought out revolutionary outfits like the African National Congress (ANC) is never deficient of leadership. On the contrary it builds stronger on the strength of leadership renewal. ZANU PF’s infections of leadership stagnancy have, just like any other lost course infected a domino effect in our lives. We see people refusing to leave office at trade unions, in churches, in civil society, in soccer and political parties. 

This is how deep the nation has lost direction as a cascading result of President Mugabe’s long term incumbency. We have transgressed. Our knowledge systems have become symbolic. If at any stage of our cultivation we cannot use our minds to change things and the status quo, that knowledge is helpless, it’s irrelevant and a complete worst of effort. 

To this we start hearing of other leaders convincing gatherings that, “leaders are God given”. That is dangerously coming from the fact that the ‘revolution’ in itself have become and evolution of mimicry tactics. We hope our nation will fumigate this cunning demon.

time out…

The president should know that its time out for him, he needs to rest so that we don’t worst any valuable time discussing and debating about age and producing cloths of an 88 year old. This should become increasingly clear to everyone. When we say time out, it means its his time that is out not for the nation.

His continued stay in office will subject the nation to unseen dangers. This is mainly because at that age, we are not sure what he will say at different for a, some of his statements will one of these days subject the nation to aggression from the global bullies. 

moving on

We need to remain alive to the fact that very soon Mugabe will be a fading memory. Zimbabwe will never fade off. Lets collectively make this point at every engagement of our lives. Our actions and thinking should be founded on the national well being rather than on building enigma personalities and threatening the country with war when we differ.

As the late good general Solomon Mujuru would say, “Those who threaten the people with war did not fight the war”. As you celebrate your 88th birthday president Mugabe, you need to go and rest. The country believes you did your bit but as is the law of diminishing returns have taken over.

Tabani Moyo can be contacted at rebeljournalist@yahoo.com

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