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Madhuku
and mediocrity of the majority
Tonderai Munakiri
May 30, 2006
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/madhuku7.14233.html
THE amendment
of the NCA
constitution by Lovemore Madhuku to accommodate his addiction and
insatiable appetite for power marks a sad turning point in our democratic
struggle for a better Zimbabwe.
I am not a member
of the NCA, neither was I part of the first group that formed the
NCA. But the NCA has played a vital role in our democratic struggle
for a new constitution, a better and new Zimbabwe. The NCA carries
our hopes for a new dispensation because of its consistency and
viability as a civic body. In addition, it is a source of hope because
it was founded on democratic norms, ethos and culture. But like
a catalyst for change, the NCA must practice what it preaches!
It is against
this background that the NCA must continue to push our democratic
struggle for a new constitution without eggs in its face. As things
stand, Dr. Madhuku is vainly trying to make us believe that out
of 11 million Zimbabweans, no one else except himself is qualified
to lead the struggle for a new constitution. He is saying in other
words, that out of the 3 000 NCA members nobody is fit to lead the
NCA struggle for a modern constitution that is compatible with the
democratic imperatives of the 21st century.
This is a sad
day for Zimbabwe and civic organizations that check and balance
the excesses of government. Civic organizations must check and balance
themselves before they can make the government accountable. Zanu
PF must surely be having a field day because the NCA has failed
a major tenet of the democratic test. The gains of our democracy
have been taken backwards by this sad turn of events. Madhuku is
just using the old and tired argument of the mediocrity of the majority
by claiming that "membership" wants him to remain in this position
for another five years to accomplish the task of a new constitution
for Zimbabwe. This is a veneer argument that will not pass a litmus
test. Leaders come and go, they are not meant to die in power.
Our politics
in Zimbabwe has been turned into physical fist fights because we
use "rented crowds" to achieve our objectives. We have used undisciplined,
desperate and unemployed youths to instil fear in anyone who dares
to disagree with our greediness for power. We have become very cheap
as a country and as individuals because we can do anything to achieve
our power mongering goals. Our leaders have taken advantage of the
poverty that reins in our midst to use mediocrity to stay in power.
Most African leaders make this archaic claim that membership or
constituency wants them to remain in power to justify continued
misruling of their countries or organizations.
In Zimbabwe
and indeed in Africa, we have created a cult of personality around
some leaders and this has become so engrained that we don't think
that a country or organization can function without some individuals.
We have made
other people believe that they are not capable by denying them a
chance to lead. For instance, Mugabe is still in power today because
everyone in Zanu PF believes he is indispensable and he has come
to believe that the succession debate is divisive and so nobody
should talk about it. Just recently, Olusegun Obasanjo attempted
to change the constitution without much luck, the same goes for
Fredrick Chiluba in Zambia and Muluzi in Malawi. These countries
will never collapse because the incumbents left office, to the contrary
these countries will thrive because they have allowed younger and
alternative blood to serve.
We must recognize
the gifts and talents of the young and women in our societies. Most
of the times we exclude these minority populations from the political
process just because we believe they are not capable or that they
have no gifts and talents. Women and young people should be given
a chance; they should participate in the electoral, political and
in the developmental process. Genuine leaders (statesman) should
always be futuristic, if Madhuku felt there was nobody better than
him, why would he not groom a successor, why would he not show the
rest of the world that he cared about the generations after him
by training somebody to take over from him? One wonders if Madhuku
has ever thought that he is a mortal being.
As some renowned
speakers have said on this column, Zimbabwe needs a metamorphosis
of its value system. The Zanu PF culture has corrupted all of us;
we have all become greedy and corrupt. The value system of our country
needs to be overhauled and we need to be exorcised of the Zanu PF
way of life because we have become so selfish and self-centered
that we don't care about the national interest when we get into
leadership positions. Our values have changed to suite our financial
needs; everything we do is motivated by greed, power and plunder.
We have started
to do business the Zanu PF way because it is the only way we know
of conducting business. Consequently, the culture of using rented
crowds, the culture of violence, repression, authoritarianism and
greed have become pervasive in our society. Gone are the days when
principles and a good value system was a pinnacle for our societies.
Gone are the days when "ubuntu" was bedrock of everything we did
in our country.
We are sadly
witnessing the erosion and decay of principles and values at the
altar of expediency ladies and gentleman.
*Tonderai
Munakiri is a Zimbabwean and writes from South Africa. You can contact
him at: tonde@myway.com
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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