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Taking
us forward to yesterday
Luke Tamborinyoka
September 12, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/09/12/taking-us-forward-to-yesterday
On Saturday,
the MDC organising secretary Nelson Chamisa, who turned 35 this
year, will be the master of ceremonies at Sakubva Stadium in Mutare
where the people’s party will be holding its 14th anniversary
celebrations.
This week, Emmerson
Mnangagwa and Sydney Sekeramayi are part of the Cabinet
team President Robert Mugabe reappointed for the umpteenth time
and by the time their term ends in 2018, they will have served a
total of 38 years as members of Mugabe’s Cabinet.
Talk of career
Cabinet ministers!
They have been
in Cabinet for almost the same time young Nelson Chamisa has lived
on this earth! Mugabe’s latest Cabinet is just a big joke,
to say the least.
If Zimbabweans
and the world at large have been waiting for the new Cabinet to
get the message of the policy direction Zanu-PF wants to take this
time around, everyone has been disappointed.
It’s more
of the same.
Mugabe has simply
taken the forward to yesterday. With an average age of around 70
years, it would be unfair for the Facebook generation of this brave
21st Century to expect salvation from this lot.
The youth and
the women largely remain by-standers while Mugabe and his old guard
take the mantle of both the party and the country.
It is a Cabinet
which does not inspire any confidence at all.
It ranges in
irony from a minister of Media more known as a media hangman for
his closure of independent newspapers to a deputy minister of Information
who owns an “independent” and “privately-owned”
radio station in the country.
We now have
full-fledged ministries to deal with “courier services”,
“climate” and “psychomotor” activities in
when these could at best have been departments in other ministries.
How ridiculous
can we get.
The prospects
remain bleak for my beloved media fraternity.
Ten years ago,
when I was the secretary-general of the Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists, I was taking Jonathan Moyo to court over
the unconstitutional provisions of Aippa.
And he still
disagrees with Sadc and the rest of us that this is an area where
reform is necessary.
We are back to square one.
For our sins,
we could see the return of PaxAfro by next week and 1 000 percent
local content in all our media by tomorrow to mark the second coming
of the good Professor.
The return of
this doyen of hate speech is certainly no good news to an industry
expecting media reform and the full implementation of the provisions
of the new Constitution
in relation to information access and the role of the State media.
And then the
new minister of Energy, Dzikamai Mavhaire is old, tired and weary
to the extent that he needs the energy himself first before he gives
it to the rest of the nation.
Josaya Hungwe
(responsible for Psychomotor activities) is just another joke.
There is basically
no new person among the Cabinet ministers, only a sprinkling of
new faces among the deputies. More like rearranging the chairs of
the Titanic in the hope of changing its fate.
Lazarus Dokora,
Hungwe, Mavhaire, Paddy Zhanda etc give one the impression that
this is more about providing a lifeline to expired cadres than anything
else.
If ever there
was need for any evidence that this party, and the country is finished,
this is it.
The old man
simply wants to take his party, and unfortunately the country, to
his grave.
Only two ministers
have apparently been demoted, Savior Kasukuwere , now minister of
“Climate change” and Obert Mpofu, the minister of Transport.
If one looks
at recycled material such as Joseph Made, Ignatius Chombo, Simbarashe
Mbengegwi, Kembo Mohadi and Emmerson Mnagagwa, one gets the confirmation
that the President is taking too far the gospel of the green revolution;
of recycling as being good for the environment!
This is simply
a party of yesterday people that wants to lead us today, tomorrow
and the day after.
As for Webster
Shamu, the newly-appointed minister of Information, Communications
Technology, I am not even sure if he can use an Ipad.
Then there is
the apparently laughable plot to dilute the MDC’s influence
in the two metropolitan provinces of Harare and Bulawayo by appointing
ministers of State for Provincial Affairs, whatever that is.
Zanu-PF does
not believe in the new Constitution,
particularly the issue of devolving power to the provinces.
That is why
they have recentralised by appointing these ministers of Provincial
Affairs.
This is a major
statement against the Constitution and we all have to prepare for
more attacks on the people’s charter that we regarded as a
revolution.
In the battle
of the factions, it appears the faction that was behind the theft
and violence
in 2008 and the grand theft in 2013 has benefitted handsomely,
if one looks at the figures who have landed a sizeable handful of
the influential posts.
From the Speaker
of Parliament to the Finance minister and the minister who will
do the spin, the survivors of Dinyane appear to be very much still
with us!
Indeed, they
have survived to fight another day.
As for the influential
Mines ministry, we have chosen to take it to Zvimba. We cannot gamble
with such a key ministry and so we have decided to take it to our
village in Zvimba by giving the portfolio to our close relative,
Walter Chidhakwa.
It remains a
Cabinet of archaic minds that could still return to Chinhoyi in
the belief that pure diesel can ooze out of a rock.
A quick glance
at the picture combo of those who solicited help from the diesel
n’anga will show that the characters who went to Chinhoyi
remain in Cabinet.
In this brave
21st Century, we have Cabinet ministers who go to a sangoma with
the sanction of the full Cabinet in the belief that Zimbabweans
can end up getting their fuel from a rock!
Well, this must
have been the original meaning of the word Cabinet something made
of (dead?) wood!
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