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Mugabe
should take leaf from the Pope
Mathula Lusinga
February 13, 2013
http://hararesunset.wordpress.com/2013/02/13/mugabe-should-take-leaf-from-the-pope/
Next week, Zimbabwe President
Robert Mugabe will be turning 89 and I so happen to share a birthday
with him. While he cuts his cake in Harare, I will be cutting mine
somewhere in exile. There seem to be no shame from Mugabe that at
his age, he still wants to continue ruling the country, taking it
to further ruin. Pope Benedict XVI, a catholic like Mugabe announced
his retirement on Monday this week, paving the way to handover the
baton to someone younger. But it does not need a rocket scientist
to predict that Mugabe, as he celebrates his old age next Thursday,
he will be insisting on standing in the presidential race. He might
use the occasion to announce what he thinks are his fresh and new
ideas on how Zimbabwe will move forward. We all know that Mugabe
is just gearing himself to die in office because he is afraid of
all the blood that he has in his hands.
Lest you forget,
President Mugabe is directly responsible for murdering more than
20 000 Ndebele-speaking Zimbabweans in Matabeleland during the early
1980s political disturbances. He directed the North Korean-trained
Fifth brigade to murder innocent civilians in Matabeleland and its
hinterland. So he is afraid of leaving power because under his watch,
corruption has been left to ruin.
As elections
loom
But as we approach
elections, there are two major concerns that seem to threaten the
staging of free and fair pools. The harassment of human rights workers
and journalists has been intensifying in the past few days, raising
fears of the return
of the dark days of 2008. Police on Monday intensified what
the civil society organisations perceived as a systematic crackdown
on civil society organisations by raiding
the offices of the Zimbabwe
Peace Project (ZPP) and seized several documents and other materials.
Five members of the Zimbabwe Republic Police stormed the ZPP offices
in Harare-s Hillside suburb, where they searched the organisation-s
offices for "subversive material and illegal immigrants".
In run-up to the 2008 elections, state security agents raided the
same office and later arrested its boss human rights activist Jestina
Mukoko. She was held incommunicado
for nearly a month where she was subjected to inhuman treatment,
including being tortured. Freedom of speech is now questionable
and one wonders how we are supposed to debate issues that affect
us in general. Just last week, a friend of mine was sentenced to
six months in prison for allegedly insulting President Mugabe in
a suspected pub brawl with ZANU-PF supporters. While it is stated
in the Global
Political Agreement that the public and private media shall
refrain from using abusive language that may incite hostility, political
intolerance and ethnic hatred or that unfairly undermines political
parties and other organisations, I suspect my friend was treated
in an unjustly way as witnesses say he was attacked by the said
Mugabe supporters and no one seems to know what he said exactly.
It is only in Zimbabwe where such things happen. We have become
a country where our judiciary is afraid of dealing with real issues
like corruption and other illegal practices in favour of dealing
with the weaker man on the street that is given no chance to express
his feelings about things. Without freedom of speech, there is no
chance in hell that the outcome of election results will be accepted
as fair.
Will
Mugabe say yes?
It looks like Kenya has
taken a lead in trying to open politics in Africa. Last week presidential
candidates in the forthcoming Kenyan polls participated in a televised
public debate that was seen by millions of Kenyan voters. While
there may be other problems in the preparation for elections in
that country, I think Kenyan politicians should be applauded because
they have just given voters a chance to know who amongst them knows
what they are talking about and doing. We wait such a day in Zimbabwe
when our leaders can agree to take their policies to a public televised
debate. Not trying to dismiss Zimbabwe-s leaders, I suspect
people like Mugabe are very much afraid of such a move. For many
years, they have been protected by a one sided media which only
broadcasts what they want to say in their comfortable zones and
calling them to a live debate would be a taboo. At his age, I doubt
if Mugabe can be able to sustain a heated debate. Part of him may
be afraid that questions may raise his high blood pressure which
may result in him collapsing and becoming the first president that
died in a live public debate. We need those debates as of yesterday.
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