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In
the spirit of nation building
Mutsa Murenje
March 30, 2011
Differences exist in
all countries and in every level of society. They arise when we
believe our interests are incompatible. Differences, however, aren-t
a negative phenomenon and/or a negative force. They can be an essential
component of immense creativity, social change, development and
progress. Differences no doubt remain a necessary component of human
interaction. This has to be largely because they are a natural expression
of our perpetual struggle for justice and self-determination.
Today is the 29th of
March 2011 and it was on this very day three years ago that Robert
Mugabe and his ZANU PF party lost elections to Morgan Tsvangirai
and his MDC party. We are all aware of the political violence that
followed the disputed harmonised elections. The death of our friends,
relatives and compatriots caused us great grief and consternation
and nobody in 2011 would want a repeat of the ugly brutality and
violent repression that we had to go through following the dictator-s
defeat. Current events in Zimbabwe are key indicators that what
we experienced in 2008 is, to a greater extent, likely to be repeated.
I have detected and
identified hate speech, harassment, arrests and victimization of
human rights and democracy activists as signs of an emerging crisis.
I am, therefore, issuing this warning to decision makers and society
as a whole in order to forestall violent conflict, or the spreading
and intensification of conflict. My task is very simple: prevention,
mitigation and preparedness.
In the spirit of nation-building,
I am repeating something that I have said countless times in various
fora. Please be informed, dear reader that I take practical and
moral responsibility for what I say privately or publicly. There
is a strong belief in my moral and political thought about the unity
or oneness of mankind and the consequent duties that we owe one
another. Drawing inspiration from Victoria (1492-1546), I believe
that we constitute a 'universal community-, a great
society governed by such natural laws as mutual love and assistance.
It is from this standpoint that I, Mutsa Murenje, hereby reiterate
that the Zimbabwean dictator, Robert Mugabe, is past service and
nothing will be gained by assuming or even wishing the contrary.
Mugabe has an inflated
opinion of himself, one that is highly unjustifiable. He is nothing
but an old and broken reed, ready to fall at any time. In converging
your attention towards this fact, I have remembered the words of
Alfred Adler the famous Viennese psychologist who had this to say:"It
is the individual who is not interested in his fellow men who has
the greatest difficulties in life and provides the greatest injury
to others. It is from such individuals that all human failures spring."
Ours is an impoverished
and oppressed society with a provocative and manipulative political
leadership. Although our frustration will not erupt suddenly, it
will inevitably erupt as a manifestation of accumulated aggression
and hostility. Authoritarianism is an evil; authoritarianism is
a cancer in the body politic which must be removed before our democratic
health can be realized. The underlying philosophy of democracy is
diametrically opposed to the underlying philosophy of authoritarianism
and all of the dialectics of the logicians cannot make them lie
down together.
We have weak institutions,
fragile political systems and divisive social relations and our
country is likely to be drawn, as we have witnessed in the recent
past and in recent times, into cycles of conflict and violence.
We have lost faith and trust in the governing structures, society
and institutions to manage our 'incompatible- (can we
really say that ours are irreconcilable differences?) differences.
In the national interest
and in the spirit of nation-building, I don-t want Zimbabwe
to plunge into chaos. I wouldn-t want our country to be yet
another Mozambique, Angola, Rwanda, Burundi, Somalia, DRC, Liberia,
Sierra Leone, the 'triangle of trouble- (Chad, Central
African Republic, Sudan) and until recently, Libya.
To prevent the aforementioned
crisis from occurring, it is necessary that we address the hostile
mistrust and belligerence before it reaches a point where we believe
violence is our only recourse. I believe this is an issue that should
be of great concern and high up on our political agenda in our country.
This should even come before we have an election.
I want us, as a nation,
as Zimbabweans, to create a situation in which our differences can
be addressed in a non-violent and constructive manner. This is necessary
for bettering the lot of our people a lot better. May God bless
Zimbabwe!
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