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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Simba Makoni joins the presidential race in Zimbabwe - Index of Articles
Message
to all Zimbabweans in South Africa from Simba Makoni President 2008
Advertisement - Mail & Guardian (SA)
February 29, 2008
There
cannot be a better moment for the people of Zimbabwe to reflect
on their lives and society than this past weekend when some of our
compatriots celebrated 84 years of our President's life. Indeed
it is a great moment because, if these celebrations are honestly
understood for what they truly represent, no one should be left
in any doubt that we are indeed witnessing an end of an era, and
are sitting at the edge of a new Dawn/Kusile/Mavambo.
It is a new dawn because
the old is giving way to the new. It is an inevitability that only
the naïve would dispute. It is a new dawn not because we have
planned it this way, but because it is what nature desires.
For the past eight years,
this country has witnessed crisis after crisis. The fall of Robert
Mugabe's government has been a constant matter for speculation
for a long time, but the events of the past twelve months have lunged
the president's stock so low that the question which now dominates
discussion among many in every quarter in our society, is how long
can the President continue to deny the inevitability. It is not
just his enemies who believe that the end is nigh, but the solid
center of ZANU-PF is rapidly coming to the same conclusion. Even
those he can still count on as friends and allies admit as much
in private, whatever their protestations of loyalty in public.
President Mugabe has
shown a great deal of resilience over the years, but the truth is
that we know enough of his weaknesses and we have come to one simple
conclusion; that he and those around him are incapable of mounting
a credible strategy for a sustained recovery of this country. He
and his team have dug one big hole and they are sitting in there
unsure how to claw their way out. Moreover, the truth is that this
government is unable to draw a line of their mistakes and start
again.
All attempts for economic
recovery have failed largely because of this government's
desire to depict principle when all around it is crumbling. In any
other enterprise that has not faired well, the first questions that
would be asked are; "who is in charge here? Who has been making
decisions?" One great achievement of this government is that
it has been able to deflect these questions, and instead has masterly
transferred blame to any other person within sight, but never itself.
Scapegoats have been found at every turn.
But the ruling party's
mistake has been the shifting political terrain. The leadership
of this country has arrogantly assumed that the electorate has remained
constant in their attitudes and aspirations, and yet every one of
us hates what we see around us. We are ashamed of what we have become,
a laughing stock around the world. We are ashamed because we walk
with our eyes closed because we do not want to face our reality.
Yes, we have been badly
governed, but at this same time we now have a great opportunity
to harness this hate which is born out of frustration, so that we
transfer it into happiness which comes from the knowledge that our
society is on the verge of a dramatic change for the better.
One great triumph of
this year's election is that the electorate and not politicians
are marking the political terrain. The people of this country have
had enough of a mediocre existence, are now focused on one thing
- CHANGE. This desire for change is being shaped by the new
realities in Zimbabwean politics. For far too long now, there have
been an assumption that the political terrain is a battlefield for
two parties, ZANU (PF) and MDC. This has emanated from a mindset
has been deliberately allowed to emerge that thinks in pairs.
For ZANU (PF) a single
opposition in a more or less two party system is a creature that
is desirable, because it is to defeat. And for the commentators
the distinction between the two protagonists is much easier to explain,
yet the electorate have moved dramatically further. They see politics
three dimensionally. The electorate is the third force that is bound
to change the face of Zimbabwe's politics for good.
This is going to be a
great year for the people of Zimbabwe, like one politician put it,
"those seeking real reform must choose between a party that
looks over its shoulder and one that looks over the horizon".
Support in cash or kind
from Zimbabweans in South Africa is welcome. For financial support
we have set up a trust account:
Cheadle Thompson and
Haysom Trust Account:
Bank: First National Account
Branch code: 251905
Account: 62015395397
Swift code: FIRNZAJJ950
Reference Number: SMFC01
MAVAMBO KUSILE DAWN
SIMBA MAKONI PRESIDENT
2008
simbamakonipresident2008@gmail.com
Simba Kuvanhu! Simba
Ebantwini! Simba for the People!
Let's Get Zimbabwe
Working Again
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