Do we have a revolution betrayed? | The Herald

via Do we have a revolution betrayed? | The Herald December 27, 2013 by Reason Wafawarova

Where political supremacy is a monopoly of a few powerful kleptomaniacs, opposition is the slow and painful starvation of the masses, and hard work no longer rewards as much as unquestioning obedience to power. Patronage politics create an environment where condescending politicians manipulate the behaviour of all to enlarge their power tentacles.

When it takes four years for a country like Zimbabwe to discover that a prominent taxpayer-funded organisation like the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation pays 12% of its total revenue to one person in salaries and allowances alone, one cannot avoid germane concerns over matters of accountability.

It is sad that the old adage that says he who does not work shall not eat has been replaced by a notorious new doctrine that says he who does not acquiesce to the diktats of power shall not eat. There is no doubt the suspended ZBC Chief Executive Officer owes his luxurious four years of inconceivable profligacy more to perfidious obedience to power than to any imaginable measure of merit or logic.

It is hard to imagine that the Government is as shocked with the salary of the ZBC Chief Executive Officer like the entire nation is, but it does appear very important people in government are horrified.

Perhaps it is time all the lies flying around about the true status of our economy are exposed so that by comparing the lies we may at least come up with a semblance of the truth.

Someone must tell us how much the CEOs at NetOne, NRZ, ZESA and the GMB are paid, and against what amount of revenue. That must be fair enough. We hear the government is planning a salary regulation mechanism for the captains of these public owned companies, and I am sure in our sorry circumstances we can only applaud the move instead of questioning where the same government was when all this malfeasance was happening.

No doubt our outspoken opposition to the illegal and outrageous Western imposed economic sanctions has been unfairly taken advantage of by ravenous vampires sucking the blood of the nation at the expense of everyone else. The egregious sin of ZDERA now stands like a pea next to the mountain compared to the scandalous conduct of some of our own leadership in industry and politics.

Wholesome looting from the nation and blaming it all on Western sanctions has reduced our solidarity as a revolutionary unit to a shameful insult to the essence of intelligence.

We expect the dedicated and well-meaning cadre to camouflage the stinking veniality of looters, and that is demeaning to the revolution.

That kind of betrayal to the revolution is worse than the treachery of a Western-sponsored puppet party, and cannot be tolerated.

President Robert Mugabe just told us that the ZMDC is guilt of “doing nothing”, and we ask ourselves why it takes Walter Chidhakwa to pick this in just about 100 days as Minister of Mines when another Minister vociferously preached a gospel of revolutionary happenings within the mining sector in the past four and half years.

We were even told that we were so minerally strong and viable that we did not need anyone from the Western markets.

Even the ZBC was also under another Minister who gave the impression that the broadcaster was quite viable in the last four and half years.

So Muchechetere seems to have secured it all by simply obeying power in the narrowest of scopes, and he took home a cool $40 000 a month for his outstanding loyalty. Meanwhile the rest of the workers at the national broadcaster went unpaid and unnoticed for half a year. There was a board comprising leading personalities presiding over this unquestionable insanity.

For as long as patronage and protection politics remain the modus operandi in the affairs of our politics, exploitation and robbery will be the order of the day; and the principle of “people-oriented policies” will remain to many a shameful lie, uttered with the object of keeping the masses enslaved in their untold poverty.

We cannot live in a country where our people consider it a miracle to merely have an understanding that life is beautiful – all because we harbor in our political structures monstrous brutes so obsessed with the demon of self-aggrandisement. Let this generation cleanse Zimbabwe of all evil, oppression, corruption, abuse and violence.

Simply put this generation must not allow the prevailing of the kind of nonsense as has been happening at the ZBC, and of course in many other sectors of our economy.

For the end to justify the means there must be something to justify the end itself, and this is why failure to deliver with the land reform program and the indigenisation policy is not an option.

We cannot justify a land reform program that resettles poverty on our fertile lands simply because we want to see the colour black occupying that land. That would be racial bigotry, and nations are not run on race emotions. We need a prosperous post-land acquisition agrarian regime.

Justice for Zimbabwe’s indigenous people is in the economic success of their own empowerment; not merely in the dispossession of the colonially privileged.

Clearly some politicians in ZANU-PF are not interested in the people; just like puppet politicians in the opposition are not. But every politician must always be reminded that the people are interested in them, and that people are like war – they will have their way.

Any political party that leans on the people but serves the corrupt bourgeoisie cannot but sense the unmistakable smell coming from the waiting grave.

If ZANU-PF does not take seriously the fight against corruption and thievery within its own structures there is a realistic chance there might be very little to succeed in the event of the departure of President Robert Mugabe, himself barely holding together what appears to be a treacherous lot of outrageous malingerers.

Yes ZANU-PF has successfully stopped the MDC-T from turning Zimbabwe into a filthy and evil-smelling imperialist barrack, but that alone does not suffice in the running of a nation. When a revolution breeds wrecking poverty; a stinking imperialist barrack might look like the glorious heavens for the smitten, and ZANU-PF must know that criticism of opponents with no solutions is just as ruinous as selling out the nation to whoever cares to exploit.

When the crumbs from the imperialist table come along as more appealing than the rewards of nationalisation or indigenisation then one knows they are witnessing a revolution gone wrong – a revolution betrayed.

A revolution is not made more powerful by the use of abusive language or swearing. Such is the legacy of slave masters and brutal colonisers of our misery filled past. These are the people who hailed humiliation and disrespect for human dignity, and there is no dignity or honour in us emulating such primitiveness.

Perhaps this is why ZimAsset must of necessity be articulated in very sober terms, if only to give it a face of human dignity.

In any revolution learning is a pillar stone, and the reality of learning is that it carries the danger that one has, out of necessity to learn from one’s own enemies. We may declare whomever we may so wish an enemy of the state and often we do that on the basis of very justifiable reasons.

However it is from the acts of these very enemies that we must derive our excellence. The greatest lesson we can ever learn from the Western-imposed illegal sanctions is the busting of such sanctions. Canvassing for sympathy while we are crumbling under the pressure of these sanctions is no heroic act – and our politicians must get this very clear.

ZDERA is to some a sign of strength on the part of the United States, and even some Zimbabweans have very little trouble hailing America as the strongest power that ever has been on planet earth. True this assertion may be, but one sure thing is that the US is the most terrified state on this globe, and ZDERA is in this context a sign of the terrified state of imperial America, so scared of independent nationalism on the part of lesser peoples.

Once we see ZDERA as an expression of fear on the part of the US, our determination to make the land reform program a success must be renewed. But we have politicians who masquerade as champions of the land reform program and yet in ZDERA all they see is an America that is the strongest power in the world. These are the crybabies that go around bellyaching about the powerful ruin of sanctions – blaming even infertility among couples on the ruinous effect of the sanctions.

Anyone that fawns before the precepts established by the enemy cannot dream of vanquishing the same enemy, and that is why ZANU-PF must never count the IMF as part of the revolution the party says it is engaged in, especially a revolution geared towards independent nationalism.

Some politicians in ZANU-PF do not get along with the mirror, and they avoid looking themselves in the mirror simply because they are scared of the image they know they will see. That is why they expect all of us to permanently occupy ourselves with scolding the puppets in the MDC-T, that way perpetually avoiding showing the face of the mirror the way of ZANU-PF. But time to speak truth to power is now, and speak we shall.

The childish sanitization of clear childish politicking over succession within ZANU-PF speaks to high heavens of the humongous strength of the monster in the house.

Reading Rugare Gumbo’s interview with The Herald reporter Tichaona Zindoga over the succession issue was quite revealing. Clearly the ZANU-PF spokesman is at a loss whether it is the members of ZANU-PF who choose their own leader when the need arises, or it is the hierarchy of the party that chooses on behalf of the people.

We are spared the troubles of Gumbo’s confusion by the fact that President Robert Mugabe has made it clear that the next leader will come from the ordinary members of ZANU-PF, according to the party’s constitution, something the ZANU-PF spokesperson must have missed, or perhaps pretended to be missing.

Zimbabwe we are one and together we will overcome. It is homeland or death!!

REASON WAFAWAROVA is a political writer based in SYDNEY, Australia.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 13
  • comment-avatar
    Rumbie Mhere 10 years ago

    If Muchechetere’s salary was $40000, may someone tell us the salary that the Minister of Media was getting by then.This is an area that everyone is not discussing.

  • comment-avatar
    Tambaoga 10 years ago

    I’m surprised to hear that the President was not aware of this outrageous salaries.What is the purpose of the CIO ,they should have sniffed it out and alert the President. Mugabe knew about this but now he is pretending like its news to him. Who is fooling who?

  • comment-avatar
    Sekuru Mapenga 10 years ago

    Herald editor – prepare to look for a new job for allowing such an article to be published… Zanu PF want Happison’s vision – that is why they paid him so much.

  • comment-avatar

    Great to have such an article aired in the Herald. Corruption,
    favouritism and the will to let true Law & Order take its course
    without bias, has landed Zimbabwe where it is ! A mess.
    Our leaders have failed us. You cannot just pick and choose ideals
    to suite your very insular belief.
    Zimbabwe is dynamic, it needs to use all its people, skills
    and resources. That will make our country the envy of the
    rest of Africa.
    In the meantime, ” We are in for a lean time “

  • comment-avatar
    Nyoni 10 years ago

    A well written article Reason. Well put now lets see the responses.

  • comment-avatar
    goodlife 10 years ago

    “If ZANU-PF does not take seriously the fight against corruption and thievery within its own structures there is a realistic chance there might be very little to succeed in the event of the departure of President Robert Mugabe, himself barely holding together what appears to be a treacherous lot of outrageous malingerers”REASON WAFAWAROVA are you making a u turn now? You seem to be in agreement with these puppets in the MDC-T,because l thought these are some of the issues these puppets have been raising and saying all along. Maybe you were so blinded by good living standards in Australia. Dzokai kumusha kunevamwe tikange nzungu nemuromo pamwechete Becuase to be honest with you, Sir you haven’t said anything new in this mouthful article of yours. Deno zvose zvino vengwa ne mapuppets zvaisaitika pamwe nanhasi uno kusina bato remapuppets ako aya

  • comment-avatar

    Interesting article. Brutally honest considering its coming from a newspaper that has been blinded from the very truth that people have been saying over the last decade.

    Have the Journalist and Editors at the Herald suddenly woken up from their slumber.

    It rare that one comes across such honest analysis in today’s polarized politics of our beloved country.

    I would say i agree with writer 90% on what he says in article, however my opinion is he went off the mark a bit when he parroted the Zanu pf rhetoric by calling the,MDC puppet politician.However this was not what the article was about and the writer managed to put across some valid arguments that should wake up a few in the “liberation movement”.

  • comment-avatar
    Johnson@yahoo.com 10 years ago

    THE REVOLUTION HAS NOT YET STARTED. IT IS YET TO BEGIN. THE MESSING SURPASSES IAN SMITH’S. NOTHING TO WRITE HOME ABOUT. WE DO NO KNOW THE DIRECTION ANYMORE

    • comment-avatar

      Johnson, your CAPITALS don’t impress, it’s rude! I don’t even read the Post now and I hope others won’t either!

  • comment-avatar
    kiddnile 10 years ago

    Nothing new in the article-that’s what Zimbos have been saying for years & the only sad thing is that this Reason zanoid failed to point where corruption starts & finishes- @RGM ‘s door.

  • comment-avatar
    Dzenyika 10 years ago

    Change only works if it is measured and/or calculated. Over the last few months, I’ve started to see measured change in the Herald articles. I think there’s internal realisation amongst the rank and file of the “revolutionary party” that if they don’t usher a better life for Zimbabweans, someone else will.