By Bernard Bwoni
There is no leadership crisis in Zimbabwe or ZANU PF |
‘There is no crisis in Zimbabwe’; that was the
world widely-condemned little-big statement by the former President of South
Africa Thabo Mbeki during that opposition-inspired contentious and catastrophic
period of 2008 leading to the formation of the government of national unity.
The powerful declaration that saved Zimbabwe from the jaws of the neoliberal
sharks at the starry-eyed and unpatriotic petition of a firmly handheld
opposition.
Fast-forward to 2014; the same words are echoed and
uttered by the EU Ambassador to Zimbabwe Aldo Dell’Arriccia who boldly and
rightly made it clear to the opposition that there is no leadership crisis in
Zimbabwe. The only leadership crisis that is evident for all to see is found in
the opposition tiers where the disarray spans from zero to ninety nine problems
and some flimsy and funny attempts at the so-called renewal.
Things Fall Apart: MDC in chaotic state |
The opposition in Zimbabwe has been comatose beyond
resuscitation since that infamous neo-colonial founding and funding of 1999 and
there is absolutely nothing to renew from a spent comically-named Renewal Team
or the romantically-ruined remnants fronted by one Morgan Tsvangirai. Now, that
is a leadership in crisis.
A crisis is often defined as a ‘condition of
instability or danger, as in social, economic, political and international
affairs leading to a decisive change’. A leadership in a crisis is one that is
thrust in a mire of uncertainty and chaos, thrown into confusion and circumstantial
upheaval with catastrophic consequences. In Zimbabwe the prevailing peace and
tranquillity is not a by-product of a leadership in crisis, but rather the
strong leadership in a crisis situation by President Mugabe and the ruling
party. Under the leadership of President Mugabe there has been clarity and
finality and decisions are made with precision and patriotism for the sake of
expediency and facilitation of national processes.
There is consistency and cohesion in terms of
policy and national trajectory. The only crisis in Zimbabwe is the one induced
by the economic sanctions imposed at the behest of gullible opposition
politics. The outcome of the sanctions-induced economic crisis in Zimbabwe is
that President Mugabe has become a victim of the inconsistencies deeply
embedded in the Zimbabwean society that the sanctions were necessary to put
pressure on him for regime change purposes at the same time meant miraculously
not to maim the very same people on the ground whose ‘cause’ the opposition was
purporting to be championing. What an unfortunate paradox.
A leadership in crisis is naïve, has no vision, is a proxy implant and
totally compromised as those found within the country’s paralytic and pubescent
opposition ranks. Don’t lose sleep over the international media hype about
doomsday and dictators because that is just a smokescreen to smother the
African economic inferno that President Mugabe has unleashed to uplift and
upgrade the lives of the historically marginalized indigenes.The reality is
that President Mugabe is in charge, duly elected by the people of Zimbabwe and
he has not disappointed.
He has been the African version of the atlas,
carrying the full weight of the world of economic expectations of the country’s
sanctions-ravaged population on his shoulder through the eternity of the
damaging effects of the embargo. He has soaked the entire international
onslaught against Zimbabwe and never succumbed to the prejudices and
preferences of the settler world of neoliberal trappings. Mugabe has remained
resolute amid all the negative and damaging speculation about the country. He
has gone against the grain to redress the inequalities created by a system from
the past and put emphasis on ownership and control of the country’s abundant
natural resources. Here is a man who has carried the weight of gravity, a man
with feet firmly on the ground to the cause of Zimbabwe.
Cascading Real Wealth to Ordinary Zimbabweans Wealth that will span Generations to come |
President Mugabe’s visionary leadership has
deliberately and effectively focused on cascading real wealth down to the
ordinary citizens of Zimbabwe. The key here is ‘Wealth’ that will span generations
to come and not a few ‘Life-is-good-Supercharged-Range-Rover’ comic moments of
fame on YouTube. That is real wealth filtering down to the original owners of
Great Zimbabwe through the morally-justified empowerment and indigenisation
policies.
Zimbabweans are no more mere labourers for the
settler minorities but wealthy citizens on their own land. That is not a
leadership in crisis, but a responsive and effective leadership with specific
intent to economically liberate and empower its citizens. As President
Mugabe rightly put it, we are a simple people and to take it a notch up a
simple people who aspire for an equal society for all Zimbabweans to be given
that opportunity to own what is rightfully and lawfully theirs.
The task and ask of leading a country through a
sustained period of the deliberate economic sabotage that befell Zimbabwe has
been treacherous and torturous. The ruling party has been up to the task and
hence the emerging acknowledgement from crafty colonial corners. It has been a
long and difficult journey and mostly a case of executing only the very
necessary.
Zim Asset: The Economic Blueprint; "Those criticizing and ridiculing plan are bitter individuals living in the past" |
The fine-tuning will come later once the dust settles and as the
reality of ownership becomes clear. The economic transition was going to take
time and it has. But things can only get better. Amid the so-called chaos there
is an order many throughout the continent aspire to.
The challenges that the country faces today are in
fact presenting the ordinary citizens with some hidden opportunities. As the
reality of ownership continues to slowly but surely take root the people are
beginning to fully embrace these noble and people orientated policies. As the
tectonic forces of history continue to shift beneath the feet of all
Zimbabweans, the historical inequalities of yesteryear have been redressed and
many Zimbabweans confronted with that realisation of economic independence. A
must follow for all African countries.
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Bernard Bwoni is a member ZANU PF UK and the Secretary General of the South West Branch. He writes in his own capacity.
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