|
Back to Index
Rebuilding
shattered Zimbabwe not a task for the faint-hearted
Eliphas Mukonoweshuro, Dispatch, SA
April 08, 2008
http://www.dispatch.co.za/article.aspx?id=190546
Despite President Robert
Mugabe's diversions and smokescreens, his defeat is final. Polling
stations show that Zimbabwe's Movement for Democratic Change won
last Saturday's presidential and parliamentary elections. Should
the dictator and his minions attempt to deny this truth, injustice
may win a minor victory. But it has already lost the war.
So let us take a moment
to consider what the new government's agenda would be if and when
it takes office.
Many factors have already
emerged. For one, there has been an overwhelming rejection of Mugabe
and his Zanu- PF party, not only in the major urban centres but
also in the country's rural constituencies, which used to provide
the basis of Mugabe's support. Now they have abandoned him, even
those in his heartland of Mashonaland.
It's clear that the entire
electorate demands a transparent and accountable administration.
Another factor is the
dire state that Zimbabwe is in and the monumental task that lies
ahead.
With an economy destroyed,
a social infrastructure decimated and a national spirit utterly
exhausted, managing expectations becomes perhaps the biggest challenge.
There are no easy answers,
yet neither are these insurmountable problems. Zimbabwe is showing
that it has the capacity to remove a cancerous regime, peacefully
and democratically, and that alone gives courage to all of us who
are charged with shepherding its re-emergence among the nations.
But how might success
be achieved?
Most importantly, the
new government would bring the return of the rule of law. The judiciary
will once again be free of the dead hand of the state. Justice will
be at the core of the new Zimbabwe.
This does not mean opening
the door for recrimination and victimisation. No one will be singled
out for vilification. Law and justice will prevail.
Mugabe himself would
face no special legal tribunal sponsored specifically by the new
government. He will simply be required to follow the law of the
land like anyone else.
No-one will be dispossessed
of his or her land.
Instead, all Zimbabweans
will be given a stake in our abundant natural resources. There are
no white farmers, nor black farmers, only Zimbabweans. Breaking
the racist stereotypes upon which Mugabe has built his incendiary
policies will be one of the most significant tasks in order to set
the country on a course of modernity and growth.
Economically, we reach
out to the world to help us to take this journey out of the darkness
of our pariah status. We encourage foreign investment, especially
in sectors such as mining and energy.
We propose to reprise
Zimbabwe's role as the breadbasket of southern Africa by putting
to use fallow fields laid to waste by Mugabe's supporters and cronies.
A programme of public
works, driven to some degree by international investment, will restore
the all but dissolved infrastructure of the economy and provide
work for those millions of Zimbabweans who have no jobs or who have
fled overseas in search of employment.
This we propose to do
sustainably and responsibly. Zimbabwe will be no playground for
rapacious investors seeking to destroy and pillage before moving
on to the next target and opportunity.
Industries need not be
nationalised. We are in favour of an all-inclusive, market-driven
approach. As a social democratic government, we would be mindful
of our workers' roots in unionism and of the need to gather all
Zimbabweans to the task of restoring our broken country.
We stand today at the
dawn of a new day in Zimbabwe and perhaps in Africa. The end of
the Mugabe era is like the lifting of a decades-long burden from
the shoulders of each and every Zimbabwean.
The pain we have endured
is immense, the sacrifices heroic.
The coming months and
years will remain challenging.
It is likely and regrettable
that many will be asked to bear yet more pain, carry more burdens,
wait longer.
But rebuilt it will be.
Zimbabwe will thrive again in the wake of the inevitable demise
of Robert Mugabe.
But it will be a task
for all hands and strong hearts.
*Eliphas
Mukonoweshuro is the MDC's International Affairs Secretary and newly
elected MP for Gutu South, Zimbabwe
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.
TOP
|