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Ncube
misses the point
Comment,
The Financial Gazette (Zimbabwe)
September 09, 2004
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/fingaz/2004/September/September9/6508.shtml
ZIMBABWE’S less-than
convincing self-appointed moral authority, one Archbishop Pius Ncube,
ostensibly a man of exceptional personal responsibility, is writing a
bizarre episode in his book of Zimbabwe’s tragi-comic political history.
With the initial good
deal of adulation where his stance was viewed as an act of civil bravery
to criticise government excesses getting into his head and oblivious of
the fact that the admiration is increasingly turning to scepticism, the
Archbishop was at it again last weekend.
Exhibiting unconcealed
satisfaction, the globe-trotting and politically excitable cleric bragged
in a weekly publication about how he apprised the heir to the British
throne, Prince Charles, of how politically, the pendulum has swung too
far the other way in Zimbabwe. Other key issues discussed with the man
destined to one day become king, as told by Ncube, were runaway inflation,
the AIDS scourge, the hunger which he claims is stalking the nation and
the ugly face of the ZANU PF attack machine, among others.
"I told him about
the deteriorating situation in Zimbabwe but he was well informed. He expresssed
his sadness and stated that he was the one who handed the leadership to
Mugabe at Rufaro Stadium in April 1980," revealed Archbishop Ncube, who
not long ago was economic with the truth when he appeared on Sky TV saying
that inflation in Zimbabwe was 1 000 percent! For all we know inflation
peaked at 623 percent in January this year.
In short, what the
unashamed self-publicist whose Achilles heel is playing to the gallery
told Prince Charles in no uncertain terms was that there was gnashing
of teeth in the God-forsaken country called Zimbabwe. That is not our
bone of contention because one can literally cut the disillusionment among
the generality of Zimbabweans with a knife. More than anything else however,
the trip to Great Britain exposed the cleric, whose crusade in defence
of individual liberty and standards of living we doubt is completely altruistic,
as someone still holding on to the illusion that the United Kingdom is
relevant to the political situation in the Southern African country —
a Zimbabwean obsession or national curse!
Although he did not
say it, we are hard-pressed not to feel that the Archbishop’s discussion
with Prince Charles was an unconscious indicator of his sub-conscious
intentions — that the British government should tighten the noose around
the government of Zimbabwe, which he is on record as having implied ranks
among the most despotic regimes in the world. This, the Archbishop believes,
will raise the pressure on President Robert Mugabe, who himself has never
hidden his dislike of Ncube for allegedly betraying his country in its
most desperate hour.
The "crusading" man
of the cloth, with whom the Zimbabwean authorities he accuses of a huge
democratic deficit have shown a flush of impatience, claims that he is
doing this because he is concerned with the rights of the common people,
hence the oft repeated " . . . I can’t stop talking because it is a God-given
duty that the Church must talk when people are suffering . . . "
We know only too well
that when the system crumbles, the rights of the common people would be
the last anyone remembers, which is why we would support the Archbishop,
were it not for this mentality of his poisoned by the noxious fumes of
the once blazing but now smouldering colonial fires, that the UK is a
factor in the Zimbabwean political crisis. This is moreso when it has
something to do with outworn shibboleths of the monarchical and feudal
institutions whose relevance even in the UK is not only increasingly being
questioned but is also now a subject of heated debate.
The Archbishop, who
it would not be too far-fetched to say might be using this to buy influence
and stitch together a political power base, has obviously lost contact
with reality. There are new and complex political realities in Zimbabwe
and the thinking that the UK still has the diplomatic, political or economic
clout to influence developments in the country is not only erroneous but
also bereft of realism, so to speak. The UK’s influence collapsed with
the rupture of the ties that held for several decades. If anything there
hasn’t been any hope for rapprochement and both countries seem to have
written each other off as net losses. This is a tacit admission from both
sides that the fences have irretrievably broken down.
That is why the seemingly
patronising Prince who reportedly expressed sadness over the events unfolding
in Zimbabwe since he is the one who handed the leadership to President
Mugabe — as if Zimbabweans, who sacrificed so much in the war of liberation,
achieved the right to self-determination on a silver plate — skulked.
Whatever they discussed with Ncube should have, were it for the Prince’s
wish, remained within the confines of the four walls of some dark room
in London. He knows only too well the irrelevance of his country to the
internal politics of Zimbabwe of today.
As a matter of fact
there is consensus that the solution to the country’s crisis should be
internal. Such reforms will only take root if they are backed by a durable
political sentiment at home. But this is obviously lost on the Archbishop
who still finds it difficult to overcome the inertia of Zimbabwe’s encumbering
historical ties. Little wonder the cleric’s behaviour is beginning to
provoke growing concern and the public is now looking at him with a magnifying
glass after the initial uncritical admiration and praise.
Indeed, this is why
those perplexed by the cleric’s behaviour are wondering when Archbishop
Ncube and those of his ilk are going to acknowledge the historical validity
and sustainability of home-grown political reform and the hopelessness
of seeking recourse to exogenous forces who might have their own agendas.
Otherwise it is difficult to escape the impression that whatever he has
been doing as regards Zimbabwean politics is guided by vain and groundless
hope. It is not in fact based on the calculation and understanding of
political events unfolding in the country.
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