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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
How
a new government can ensure success
Arthur Gwagwa, The Zimbabwe Guardian
March 30, 2008
http://www.talkzimbabwe.com/news/130/ARTICLE/2008/2008-03-30.html
Ever since the last presidential
elections, the major theme that has characterised the talk among
Zimbabweans is the need for a new and progressive Zimbabwe. Now
that a new government, or a recycled and modified one is in the
offing, the reality of a new and progressive nation rests on that
government making certain key decisions early because success in
life comes to those who make key decisions early and determine to
live their lives according to such key decisions the rest of their
life.
Different political parties
attempted to capture what they deem to be national issues that require
key decisions. There seems to be consensus across the political
divide that the new government-s priority is to address the
issue of the economy. I do not quarrel with that consensus, but
I wish to define what I deem to be the imperative big picture agenda
from a leadership bias.
In life, failure or indeed
success is not so much a matter of talent or resources, but it is
a matter of perspective which is why very talented people can fail
and resource-laden nations can also fail. More than anything, Zimbabwe
needs to regain its perspective and get in touch with the founding
values that contributed to its early success. Without the right
perspective, we might either bark the wrong tree or build and then
destroy our gains over night.
In Kenya, they
lost sight of the big picture and their perspective in a moment
of madness and almost destroyed the nation over night. When they
regained their perspective, all the other issues are now falling
in place. With the right perspective and the big picture in mind,
politicians may disagree but that will not divide people. With this
in mind, the Zimbabwe-s new government needs to:
Reconnect
with its people
It
should get in touch with its people both abroad and at home and
acknowledge that it needs them to achieve its goals. It must make
a clear, genuine and uncertain invitation and make people feel that
they are welcome and they also have a stake in the future of their
country.
Most of Zimbabweans
in the Diaspora have to count the opportunity cost of leaving their
safe and secure bases to go for an uncertain future in Zimbabwe
where they may be prosecuted even for having dual citizenship. To
persuade talented people currently based abroad, the government
needs to clearly demonstrate that everyone will be given a choice
to succeed in a free society and give equal opportunities to all
without discrimination based on the where one comes from, their
political affiliation, race and other irrelevant factors. In short,
the government must first find its people no matter how hard it
is going to be because a government that doesn-t value its
people will not last.
Provide hope and a vision for the future
The
new government needs to cast or recast a compelling vision that
is not only worth living for, but also dying for. As I stated in
my previous article, a vision is a clear blueprint of where we are
going and therefore becomes a distinct rallying point which serves
to unify people to one cause for common good.
In principle, the vision
for a sovereign and self-determining Zimbabwe is a very good one,
but the new government needs to explain to its people what exactly
this means and consult with them on the best way to achieve it.
This will enable its people to identify with and also own it.
The vision is there to
serve the people and it is the people who make it happen so such
people must understand and buy into it first. The nation also needs
to agree and begin to do something tangible about the vision .What
differentiates visionary people and people with a vision is that
visionary people talk so much and do less work whereas people with
a vision do less talk and do more work. The new president and his
inner team will determine whether people will buy into the vision
or not because people buy into a leader first before they buy into
his vision.
An audit
of the current status
After
defining a blueprint of where we want to go as a nation, the new
government needs to make an assessment of where we are. We can only
know exactly where we are by reflecting and taking stock of the
things that are working and those that are not working in the nation
and asking ourselves why things are the way they are. Leaders should
always go beyond the "what" and ask themselves "why".
They can then map an action plan that we will follow from where
we are and to where we want to go. The action plan must have performance
indicators which show us how far we have travelled and whether we
are making progress. Life happens between where we are and where
we want to go, therefore we must enjoy where we are on the way to
where we are going.
People
involvement in planning
The
new government must invite its people at every turn to evaluate
and revise its plans. In other words it must walk with its people
as an acknowledgement that it needs them on the journey. Generally,
people all over the world do not have faith in governments because
politicians are perceived as arrogant in thinking — that they
know it all.
To show how people distrust
governments, a story is told of Patrick, an Irish citizen who had
lived for years in America and was returning home to Ireland. At
the airport he was told that there was now a new government. Patrick
replied that, "I don-t care who they are, I hate them."
Zimbabwe-s new government has to run an extra mile to persuade
cynics like Patrick that a government can be good.
Realisation
of existence in the global village
Fifthly, the new government must realise that a free and sovereign
Zimbabwe operates in a modern global village and it can not survive
in the club of its poor SADC cousins. The new government, therefore,
needs a very strong and tactful foreign policy. It might have to
make painful concessions in the process but that-s what international
relations is all about. The business of protecting a nation-s
sovereignty while remaining on the international radar is a delicate
balancing act which requires maturity and a certain level of political
level-headedness.
In conclusion, failure
in life is not so much a lack of talent and resources in-as-much
as it is a matter of perspective. Many people and indeed nations
that fail are the ones that lost perspective and are reluctant to
regain that perspective for one reason or the other. Zimbabwe lost
perspective and that-s why we failed. To regain our perspective,
the new government must find its people, map where we are coming
from, where we want to go and where we are on the journey and make
a key decision to set off early. However, life happens between where
we are and where we want to go, therefore let's enjoy where we are
today on the way to where we are going.
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