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Wanted:
Zenga Zenga in Zimbabwe
Tendai
Marima
May 26, 2011
http://www.thoughtleader.co.za/tendaimarima/2011/05/26/wanted-zenga-zenga-in-zimbabwe/
When Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai recently announced Zimbabwe-s parliamentary
elections scheduled for 2011 would be postponed to 2012 or even
2013, many Zimbabweans must have breathed a deep sigh of relief.
Relieved because the bloodshed which accompanies every election
would be put off for a bit longer. And the rapidly mounting number
of political activists and ordinary civilians arrested, tortured
or denied medical treatment while in custody, as part of the state-s
crackdown on dissent, might gradually slow down. Treason has become
the charge de jour for any hint of dissent in the banana republic.
Offences range from the benign to the absurd like posting
a comment on Facebook or, as veteran activist Munyaradzi Gwisai
did, for organising
a screening of the Egyptian Revolution. Even, Sabbath prayers
for peace are gassed into thin air.
While for outsiders
from more liberal countries, Zimbabwe might sound like human rights
hell on earth, it isn-t. Honest. Look, it doesn-t even
make a "top ten hells on earth" list.
And for the
average Zimbabwean, the spectre of treason is part of the everyday.
It rumbles in the background while the business of living from hand
to mouth takes precedence. Decades of censorship, the lack of strong
civil society institutions and political apathy has been key in
creating the huge gulf between the discourse of human rights and
the discourses of the everyday and economic survival.
In this world,
to speak of human rights, is sometimes a luxury and sometimes rights
are a dirty word. Years of one-party rule have created the apt conditions
for rights and freedoms to be traded off for the stability and security
of the many, while some of the outspoken few, are booked and charged.
Stories of villagers
being terrorised by soldiers patrolling the diamond
fields of Marange in eastern Zimbabwe are enough to scare off
any revolutionaries dreaming of a Chimurenga-style uprising. But
it-s not only the very real obstacles of violent repression
that could prevent Zimbabweans from fully catching the protest fever
currently doing the rounds on the continent and the Middle East.
The nation suffers from a grave illness: apathy.
It-s difficult
to cite books or social scientists diagnosing this to be the Zimbabwean
condition but personal lived experience suggests this is the case.
To an extent, academics like Brian Kagoro and Glen Mpani, who have
explored the reasons for Zimbabwean passivity and indifference,
confirm this. In their respective works, both researchers argue
that the post-colonial condition of political apathy has its roots
in decades of living under a one-party state. The multiple interlocking
burdens of living under an increasingly authoritarian, economically
regressive regime have resulted in a population which "normalises
the abnormal" as a coping strategy. In other words, it-s
become so normal to hear of opposition members being beaten and
jailed that it-s hard to be concerned. Indifference makes
it easier to be dismissive and say "it doesn-t happen
everywhere". Because of this standard response, its sometimes
difficult for the "law-abiding" rich and poor to connect
their economic woes to the absurd imprisonment and torture of someone
or the shortage of medicines and medical expertise in hospitals.
This nationwide
disorder combined with the terminal impotence of an ever fractious
and frenzied opposition, which co-habits in a coalition government
with Zanu, creates the perfect setting for pantomime-style elections
to be held in 2012/3. Or, when time or health gets the better of
soon-to-be ninety Mugabe. Then our Comrade President shall declare
the dates when violence and impotence take to the stage and battle
it out in winner-takes-all parliamentary elections.
When Mugabe
declared, "we will not brook any dictation from any source.
We are a sovereign country. Even our neighbours cannot dictate to
us. We will resist that" in response to SADC-s calls
for an end to state-sanctioned aggression, he was right. Only that
"We" is the sovereign people of Zimbabwe, not "We"
the sovereign party of dictation, Zanu, which is sometimes mistaken
as a synonym for Zimbabwe. So the correct statement should be: "We,
the people will not brook any dictation from any source. We are
a sovereign nation. Even our leaders cannot dictate to us. We will
resist that."
If any lessons
are to be learnt from the Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions by Zimbabweans,
it is that dictators can be overthrown by the people; security and
stability be damned. But before any fantasies of popular uprising
or ousting Zanu by the ballot can be organised by serious activists
and non one-hit wonder online revolutionaries or used as campaign
rhetoric by a formidable opposition party (yet to be seen) Zimbabwe
needs a zenga zenga revolution, to remix Gaddafi-s words.
A revolution
of conscience in every city, every street, every house, every village
and every hut. Zenga zenga; every nook and cranny must be cleansed
of the viral strains of apathy that allow evil to flourish and culminate
in an inability to equate human rights with the right to pursue
prosperity and live in a relatively stable country. If Zimbabweans
truly want a change in the status quo or "no other but Zanu,
but without the violence" as some desire, then it begins with
this critical mass realisation. Legitimate desires for stability
and prosperity can never justify indifference towards the unjust
persecution of another Zimbabwean. Just as the apolitical urban
middle and working classes deserve to live in peace, so too do the
villagers of Marange. As do praying parishioners. And White Zimbabwean,
Zimbabwean Indian and Nigerian traders and business owners harassed
in the name of indigenisation. As Zimbabwe continues to discover
the highs and lows of 31 years of independence, may the spirits
of past liberators bless her with the realisation that indifference
to the suffering of others can be cured at the church of born-again
humanitarians by St Conscience, the Empathic One.
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