Latest News Editor's Choice


Opinion / Columnist

It's election time and once again MDC-T created confusion is on the cards

15 Mar 2018 at 03:00hrs | Views
If we had an opposition that had seriously wanted Uncle Bob out of office, he would have gone his way before 2008. Unfortunately we have fly-by-night opportunists who have found a simple and lucrative way of taking care of their families. The MDC-T VP Mama Khupe admitted last year that she was in politics for money but it is not only her. Zimbabwe's current politicians are a set-up of entrepreneurs targeting donor funds, fame, women and ill-gotten wealth. When history is written, I would not be surprised to learn that the so-called main opposition party is benefiting more from supporting the ancient regime than it would from defeating it.

Over the years MDC have made a series of blunders to ensure that ZANU PF remain in power and are we now going to witness another silly excuse that it was Madam Khupe or it was advocate Chamisa who caused another split at this crucial moment. I can assure you none of these blunders are genuine but are all part of a calculating chess game being played by our politicians at the expense of the suffering masses. Let me bring to your attention the double dealings that took place in NERA (National Electoral Reform Agenda) and led to its collapse - even though uncle Bob once alluded to it as the only way to win an election in Zimbabwe. It was in 2004 when we all thought MDC had discovered the winning formula when they announced that they would not participate in Senate elections because of the uneven playing ground. However, the then SG, Welshman Ncube, thought otherwise leading to their first split in 2005. Even though the now MDC-T could be seen indicating left, they could unexpectedly turn right. In 2005 and 2008 they got into the field even though it was still uneven. They won! But they deliberately failed to push for the declaration of results within the stipulated time, giving ZANU PF all the time they wanted to play around with the figures. Ndoku bvutirwa bonzo pamuromo.

Change comes at a cost; it is hard and we should not expect it to come easily. It entails sacrifice, courage and commitment. Our leaders seem not to know that. Then SADC intervened after noticing how elections were being rigged by ZANU PF. They drafted a number of electoral reforms which were supposed to be implemented within 18 months but, for reasons best known to MDC, especially to Tendai Biti the then SG and Elton Mangoma who were representing the MDC at the negotiating table, not even a single reform was implemented during the 5 years they were in the GNU.

In June 2013 SADC reminded MDC of the need of reforms but surprisingly another split was looming and, amidst all that confusion, they were trounced by ZANU PF in the July election. They then reverted to the 2004 stance of not participating in elections unless there were electoral reforms and together with 13 other parties formed NERA. Still this formation had its loopholes as some members of NERA continued to participate in all by-elections that came their way. Transform Zimbabwe used to call it "testing the waters" but one wonders why test the waters by legitimatising a flawed election. NERA became more compromised with the coming aboard of those who for the past 34 years had been enjoying the fruits of rigging, mai Mujuru and her Zim People First party. Subsequently, Farai Mbira took advantage of the confusion and quickly closed the NERA offices without even consulting fellow members. To a layman this might seem to be just a tactical error but an analytical eye might notice the trend of constantly making errors that somehow benefit the ruling party.

Now, once again, instead of taking advantage of the various weakness ZANU PF has displayed ever since its formation in 1963, MDC-T is busy with in-house squabbles and another split is on cards.

There are questions that need our attention we try to understand what is happening in MDC-T: Why did the late Morgan Tsvangirai chose to go against the party constitution and behind the back of his only VP Khupe to appoint Nelson Chamisa and Elias Mudzuri as VPs? Why did Tsvangirai choose to form a coalition with his former saboteurs Tendai Biti and Welshman Ncube? Who benefits more in this equation considering that some alliance parties cannot assemble more than 20 people on their own? Is Madam Khupe wrong in defending MDC-T sitting MPs against being forced to make way for the alliance partners? Does MDC-T benefit more from being in the alliance than from keeping Madam Khupe? Are we not likely to witness once again the 2013 scenario in Makoni central where the then MDC-T MP candidate Mr Sagandira refused to stand down for a coalition partner Mr S Makoni and they ended up splitting the vote and allowing P Chinamasa of ZANU PF to win? Why did Nelson Chamisa, even before his appointment by the National Council, choose to take over through a coup? The list is too long but simple reasoning will tell us that, since its inception, MDC has been winning and it can still win the forthcoming general elections. What matters most are electoral reforms not electoral partners. It is Chamisa, Khupe, Mudzuri and the MDC's National Council who should give serious attention to finally resolving this matter or they are heading for another self-inflicted defeat by Emmerson Mnangagwa and ZANU PF at the coming election.

My fellow Zimbabweans, if we are not clever enough to wake up to what is going on, we will continue to blindly follow and even give our lives to political messiahs who are in fact the brain children of the very devil we want to defeat. We do not need an opposition that is opposed to someone because of their tribe, we need an opposition that is steadfastly opposed to a corrupt and evil system of political operation. MDC-T leadership should remember that what binds them should far outweigh what tends to separate them or else the once biggest opposition party will expire with its founding president Morgan Tsvangirai.


Source - Chikuni Gaba
All articles and letters published on Bulawayo24 have been independently written by members of Bulawayo24's community. The views of users published on Bulawayo24 are therefore their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Bulawayo24. Bulawayo24 editors also reserve the right to edit or delete any and all comments received.
More on: #MDC, #GNU, #SADC, #Tsvangirai