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Independence:
A reality check
Tabani
Moyo
April 23, 2011
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/opinion/opinion.aspx?newsid=4981
On April 18,
2011, Zimbabwe turned 31 - marking three decades of 'self-rule-
and independence from the white supremacist regime of Ian Smith.
It is imperative
for the present generation to introspect on the trials and tribulations
that we as a people have experienced and attempt to make a proclamation
on the course of direction which we must pursue.
In his 1979
book, Unity and Struggle, Amilcar Cabral said: "We must avoid
the obsession of some comrades that everything is spoiled, everything
is over if they should leave the posting where they are. Nobody
is indispensable in this struggle; we are all needed but nobody
is indispensable.
"If someone
has to go and goes away and then the struggle is paralysed, it is
because the struggle was worthless . . . this is without mentioning
cases of other comrades who think when they are transferred, they
are going to die, because they have already established all conditions
for working in one spot and are called upon to go to another. What
blindness! As if our land were just a little corner! This shows
a lack of awareness of the real reason, the aim and characteristics
of our struggle."
Our struggle
for the liberation of Zimbabwe was not fought by Zanu PF alone.
It was Zimbabwe-s struggle for self rule and independence,
and all living in it fought and felt it. Its aspirations, hopes
and dreams were aimed at ending all forms of discrimination, facilitate
equitable access to the country-s resources and the greater
enjoyment of a peace of mind which comes with such freedoms. It
was never a personal struggle -- each and every man and woman played
a part in ensuring that the settler regime was dismantled.
With the coming
of independence in 1980, the nation lost its way in the euphoria
of the black administration coming into power. We literally surrendered
our rights into the hands of other men to define and chart the course
of our destiny. In this, we allowed man and woman to build fiefdoms
and empires of immortality aimed at self preservation as opposed
to serving the nation
Personalities
grew in stature and the national image dwindled. As Cabral clearly
stated in his historical narratives, we need to deal with the 'irreplaceables-
in our body polity.
The Southern
African Development Community through its organ Troika
on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation seems to have struck
the correct code. What it did on March 31, 2011, was to remind the
political leaders of Zimbabwe on the virtues of the liberation struggle
which they were fast forgetting.
Impliedly, the
resolutions seem to point to the fact that the concept of sovereignty
comes with responsibilities for the state actors.
The main challenge
which confronts Zimbabwe today is too much investment in personalities.
We are fast moving towards creating cults in our political leaders.
Our artists are now relegated to dedicating their creative prowess
in praise singing. It-s like the country pulse at one moment
is on pause as dance, song, poetry and other forms of art congest
media prime time slots in a bid to immortalise the mortals. Truly,
these are not the founding principles on which the liberation struggle
was waged. What the country fought for was the freedom to choose
and other freedoms including living in peace.
Zanu PF has
lost its legitimacy and mandate to see through the aspirations of
Zimbabweans. The MDC factions, on the other hand, seem to be trapped
in the political methodologies and facing challenges in interpreting
the stage at which we have reached in the journey of the liberation
struggle. This is a stage of understanding the realities of the
nation, managing to lead the nation from the realities and providing
practical solutions to these realities.
There is need
for an overhaul of our politics, drifting away from the personification
process towards a configuration of Zimbabwe where every man and
woman is equal.
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