Time to save our Great Zimbabwe

“In any country where talent and virtue produce no advancement, money will be the national god. Its inhabitants will either have to possess money or make others believe that they do. In such a country, the greatest fortunes will vanish in the twinkling of an eye. Those who don't have money will ruin themselves with vain efforts to conceal their poverty. That is one kind of affluence: the outward sign of wealth for a small number, the mask of poverty for the majority, and a source of corruption for all.” Denis Diderot (October 1713 – July 1784)

Vince Musewe PDP Secretary for Finance and Economic Affairs

Vince Musewe PDP Secretary for Finance and Economic Affairs

In 2012 I took a deliberate decision to come back home in order to contribute to the political and economic dialogue about a new future based on the creation of a new Zimbabwe significantly different form that which has been imagined by ZANU(PF). The above conditions described by Denis Diderot in France in the 1700’s is what I found.

I found a desperate country where money has become the national god and where talent produces no advancement with millions of talented and skilled Zimbabweans irking a living by other means because of lack of economic freedom. I found a country full of cowards and political charlatans whose only claim to fame has been the amassing of fortunes through corruption and by paying homage to a man who is an abuser, a dictator, a selfish man, obsessed with power and yet irresponsible, arrogant and self-centred.
Despite the above I still believe that Zimbabwe can be great again but it will take a fundamental paradigm shift if we are to live to our full potential as a country. It will require that we create a new narrative that seeks to create inclusive economic and political institutions underpinned by human rights and the respect of the rule of law.

In my opinion that new narrative can only begin to happen when we have a new President at State House. As opposition parties, we will have to all support one individual who we all vote for to be our next President so that we do not split the vote and give opportunity to anyone coming from an organisation called ZANU(PF). If we do not do that, we will all suffer for it.

I am aware that opposition political parties are all talking about a grand coalition but we are not clear what its form will be and who will lead it. It is advisable that we expedite this coalition process and insist on a new governance arrangement as a matter of urgency

Such an arrangement must allow us to install a technical transitional authority in place to deal with the social and economic emergency we are facing while preparing the country for free and fair elections in the future.

The only problem we have is the resistance to change by ZANU (PF). The question must be how we get ZANU (PF) and Mugabe in particular to accept that they have failed Zimbabweans and their time has come and gone.

I continue to insist that those who continue calling for political reforms without offering us the practicalities of it are really wasting our time. These are times for solutions and not change rhetoric.
I think that the one option we have is to bring this country to a standstill so that ZANU (PF) is forced to reconsider its options and come to the table. As long as we remain luke-warm about change hoping that time will err on our side, our conditions will continue to deteriorate with no guarantee that come 2018, ( if we can survive that long) we will be able to dismiss ZANU(PF) through elections given that we have failed to do since 2000.

As I always say, there is zero incentive for ZANU (PF) to change course because we the people are not reacting to the economic decline but we are accepting it as inevitable. All this while those within ZAN (PF) are making fortunes through the crisis which they have manufactured. An example of this being the importation of maize where a closed ZANU (PF) aligned cabal will make a fortune from the import of maize.

I have no doubt that there exists a secret ZANU (PF) predatory economy which continues to be lucrative and corrupt. Unless we stop it we will not see substantive political change in the short to medium term.
I therefore propose a gathering of coalition forces where all political parties come together to give ZANU (PF) notice that unless we enter into substantive negotiation on a political transition now, we will bring Zimbabwe to a standstill until change comes.

For me that is the only power we have and it’s time to use it. There is no doubt that we all want the same things, we all want ZANU (PF) to go and it is time we put aside our differences and save our Great Zimbabwe.

Vince Musewe is an economist and author based in Harare. He is also the Secretary for Finance and Economic Affairs for the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). You may contact him on  vtmusewe@gmail.com.  The views expressed in this article are his own personal views.

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