Wednesday, 10 December 2025

Zimbabwean Journalism is Important to Our Progressive National Being: Respect It.

 By Takura Zhangazha*

A colleague shared with me some social media posts about allegations of the dire state of salary and working conditions of journalists at one of Zimbabwe’s most respected private print and now multi-media company, Alpha Media Holdings (AMH) based in Harare, Zimbabwe. 

It owns the newspapers the Newsday, the Zimbabwe Independent and the Sunday Standard.  Together with a reputation that crosses our national borders as a beacon of free expression in Zimbabwe.  

Other national media companies such as the Zimbabwe Newspapers Group (Zimpapers) also have their reputations (they own not only the Herald, Sunday Mail, Chronicle and Manica Post) among a multiplicity of other radio, newspaper and television stations. Including a new journalism training college.

Not to leave out the Associated Newspapers Group of Zimbabwe group (ANGZ) which owns another private flagship newspaper, the Daily News, the weekly Financial Gazette and an online television station.

There are also other private television, radio and print media houses inclusive of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) but for the purposes of this analysis and defense of journalism the previously aforementioned above cited examples will be enough. 

Now there is a generally unwritten code about journalists and media workers not writing about each other unless there are clear court, ethical, criminal or discrimination issues.  Or in cases where there is the deliberate criminalization of journalism as a profession.

But the social media post the cde shared with me had not been an unknown rumour within media circles about AMH and others I cannot mention due to the fact that the information has not been made as public.

It has been a rumour about the ongoing unfair labour related treatment of journalists and media workers at not only AMH but also in part across the national media industry.

As a clear example, it basically turns out that allegedly journalists working for AMH have not had regular payments of their salaries for at least ten (10) or so months.  With some social media reports also alleging recent extraordinary acts of protests at this state of affairs but also some labour related arbitration processes. 

Having worked in the media and with journalists and media workers (logistics, graphic designers, finance, media freedom advocacy, unionists), in various capacities, I am of the strong persuasion that journalists and media workers are correct not only at AMH but any other media institution in Zimbabwe to air out their views publicly.

Not only about their working conditions, salaries and labour rights but also the state of freedom of expression in Zimbabwe.  As they all come together in the national democratic public interest. Without a default censorship of poor working conditions as well as politicized editorial policing.

 I however understand the idea of the media as a ‘business’.  Almost as though that for Zimbabwe’s media to survive it must be ‘corporatized'. 

As is the case emerging now in the United States of America  (USA) and the global north or east.  Wherein we have oligarchs that can determine national discourse that is preferential to their political and economic interests without accountability to the working conditions of journalists and media workers. In tandem with their right to free expression.

This is where the media industry is viewed from the narrow lenses of assuming it is for monetary and political profit (advertising, clicks, likes, views, winning partisan elections). But not for the public interest purpose of promoting democracy, public accountability and most importantly, freedom of expression. 

This is where the public’s support for journalists also becomes important.  In an almost dual way.  Where journalistic rights and stable working conditions are protected and they do their public interest job well, the Zimbabwean public will appreciate their profession more. 

Where a public perception is allowed to fester that journalists are pushing ‘brown envelopes’ the public will lose, or in our case, may have lost respect for journalism as a profession. Let alone media ownership and assumptions of the media as industry to simply be a money as opposed to a national freedom of expression consciousness machine.     

Journalism and the media may have been made to appear as though it is simply about the money.  That is not true. 

It is a key cog in any free country’s progressive consciousness.  And note that I deliberately mention ‘progressive consciousness’ and not ‘propaganda’.  As is now largely the case in the global north, Russia and China.

Our journalists form a cultural backbone of our country.  Or at least they should.  Where they are at fault, they can be corrected without the general criminalization they have faced since our national independence in 1980.  

It becomes worse when media owners decide that they can and should exploit them in relation to their salaries and spend copious amounts of time without paying them or ignoring their union’s demands for cost of living adjustment negotiations and better working conditions.  

I will conclude with the centrality of the media, journalists/journalism as both a profession to our national independence. 

In its various forms and roles it was central to how we came to perceive of ourselves as Zimbabweans.  

Where we assume it is abstract we are missing its significant historicity.  

Where we mistreat journalists and media workers in relation to not only their salaries or working conditions then we are lost as a country.

I know that the journalist unions including the Zimbabwe Union of Journalists (ZUJ) and the Zimbabwe Graphic and Allied Workers Union (ZIGAWU) are trying their best at getting media owners, parliament, our courts and central government to understand this key point. 

While at the same time defending their members from unfair labour and working conditions.   

However we have to contend with the fact that if you treat journalism and the media as insignificant to the past, present and the future of the country then you may be missing the point of why you own a media house, a private business or are in government/parliament or local council.

And wrongly assume that journalism is about marketing, public relations or social media influencers.  That is not journalism. 

Journalism is a key profession. In its independence and its functions to promote freedom of expression and access to information in the public interest.  Pay the cdes fairly.

*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity

 

 

Saturday, 6 December 2025

A Presentation to the International Socialist Organisation (ISO) Marxism 2025 Conference.

 "A World in Crisis, World in Revolt: Solidarity with the Peoples of Palestine and Sudan."

A Presentation to the International Socialist Organisation (ISO) Zimbabwe Marxism 2025 Conference.

Venue: Briggs Zano Working Peoples College Campus, Waterfalls, Harare.

Date:  Saturday, 06 December 2025

By Takura Zhangazha*

Dear Cdes,

Thank you for inviting me to this important annual Marxism conference.  I am happy to say I know that you hold it annually with various presenters and themes. 

So it is a personal recognition pleasure to be here and be part of an organic ideological debate.

 I am a Marxist myself and I have a deep appreciation of Marxism in its variations. 

An issue I will return to later in this presentation.

Though it is sad to say, it is now a rare occurrence to have these honest discussions within the context of not only Zimbabwean politics but also global developments and identity debates. 

Hence I am sure the leaders of ISO-Zimbabwe chose the topic under serious consideration. 

That of how to look at a ‘world in crisis, a world in revolt”  With a particular emphasis on Sudan and Palestine.  

And this is understandable for many cdes who are like us based in what is referred to as the Global South.  We have witnessed the genocide in Palestine and Sudan in some sort of reality and also via mainstream and social media.  

We are also witnessing the war in Ukraine and its neo-imperialist import based on the historical global cold war in which the world was ideologically divided between socialism and capitalism.  

With capitalism claiming victory and now trying to prove this historical point of it being the sum total of an ‘end of history’ as had been previously prophesied by western academic acolytes and apparatchiks.

As is now well known and discussed we have not reached any form of any ideological end- game where neoliberal capitalism as linked to neo-liberal politics prevails. Or ends 'history'.

Instead we now know, in 2025, that we probably have a new realignment of global ideological traits. 

These new ideological battles center around almost complete ‘free market’ neo-liberal capitalism (via Trump) and its increasingly more visible alternative of direct ‘state capitalism’. The latter as defined by China, Russia and the oil oligarchies of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Qatar. 

All of this in a new battle for control of mineral resources that are now commonly referred to as ‘rare-earth minerals’ in an age of tremendous technological advancement via Artificial and other intelligences we are yet to find out about.  

So what we have, cdes, is a mixture of history repeating itself (i.e the vestiges of the global cold war/colonialism), technology as a new key global competitive ‘rush to arms’ and the nascent cultural wars that we are now confronted with about dealing with individual and collective societal realities /possibilities. The latter being mainly via the rising importance of social media in cultural consciousness.

So when we talk about Palestine or Sudan we have to understand our ideological and time- based contextual placement. Even as Africans

We are now in a period where being African and a people with struggle history is being belittled.  Even though we were assisted and also assisted the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) in our collective anti- colonial freedom struggles.

Or where with Sudan we had to recall the fact of its liberatory civilization, its civil wars and where it evidently requires Africa’s solidarity today. 

Even though this is the subject matter of today as advised by ISO, we have to contend with a newer global reality.  

This being the globally funded attempt at wiping out our own historical reality and our own national/ African continental consciousness. 

And I may sound like I am on repeat. 

If you are a progressive African, you are of the left.

 No matter your version of what you consider the same said ‘left’ to be.  Be it Leninist, Maoist, Trotskyite, Nkrumaist, Nyerereist or Machelist ideological narratives. Or whether you are Trumpian by persuasion.

But that being on that left means a search for an historical economic and social justice.  

Now what I know is that we cannot re-invent the past.  As organic as it was and is. 

Where as Nkrumah said, we neither look east, north, west or south,  we still have to look forward!

We now have to understand that our revolutionary imperative is to look to the future and our role in it. 

Both by way of biological and generational epoch age. But more significantly by way of ideological clarity for posterity. 

Cdes, we are at a global crossroads where our choices are increasingly limited.  We can choose to go left or right.  But we can also choose to combine both and go forward.

Where we say the world is on fire we must know what the fire is about.  Beyond Palestine and Sudan. As painful as that may be to consider.

The world is on fire because of its hunger for new progressive ideas.  And these are beyond privatized financialised capital. 

These are ideas of equality with the people and for the people. A rallying point that we cannot run away from.

So as you claim a new car, urban residential property  proximity to political power, remember where you are coming from and why?

 As you do when you go to you own rural home.  There are no narratives of arrival only. But there are also  narratives of false consciousness.  

These matters are beyond the immediately material. They are also about what you think about the future of not only your person but more importantly your country and your continent.

The cdes in Palestine, Sudan and beyond in countries such as Venezuela, South Sudan, Western Saharawi, DRC still require your socialist solidarity. One in which they, like the rest of us,  require a life of peace, equitable prosperity and belief in a progressive future. 

As we used to say in our anti-colonial struggles- “Aluta Continua”  “The struggle” continues comrades”

Warts and all. 

We must remain optimistic that a better world for all can become a reality.

Ndatenda. Siyabonga. Twalumba. 

*Takura Zhangazha spoke here in his personal capacity

  

 

 

Wednesday, 3 December 2025

An African in Defense of Venezuela

By Takura Zhangazha*

This write up will be brief.

Africa and African’s knowledge of the subcontinent of Southern  America is generally limited.  As an African myself, I had to learn that there are historical linkages between us and that sub-continent which we were taught as being “Latin American”. 

Mainly in order to distinguish it from what was considered a more developed, liberal and progressive North America. With the latter being inclusive of the global hegemon, the United States of America (USA).

We would sometimes get slightly confused about the USA.  We would naively assume that every time someone mentioned in class the term America, we were talking about the USA.  

It is via taking on mid-level school history lessons that we began to learn of the broader significance of liberation struggles in Africa and South America as they occurred after the second world war that ostensibly ended in 1945  

So we got to know that there was for example an island called Cuba. We also got to know that there was another island called Haiti, the one that led the first successful slave rebellion against the French in the late 19th century and inspired millions of others across not only the Caribbean but also in South America, continental Africa, the USA itself.   

All to pursue human equality and freedom from racial/setter colonialism as a universal global goal.

And there are many other lessons to be learnt.  We have had the Brazilian, Bolivia, Colombia, Chile (remember Salvador Allende) examples of a new working people driven progressive politics.  All of which countered American CIA sponsored narratives of how allegedly undemocratic those countries were as defined by a USA neo-imperialist foreign policy. As led by the infamous Henry Kissinger and his successors.

And then in the immediate contemporary, we have Venezuela.

We know for a fact that multiple USA administrations, from Clinton through to Obama, Biden and now Trump have had an imperialistic eye on Venezuela. Not only for its massive oil reserves but also for financial interests in its mineral resources such as gold.

We also know that the USA deliberately undermined the late Comandante Hugo Chavez’s government and that of his successor president Maduro.  This through, as is the case in the global south, via allegations of disputed elections and opposition leaders that in most cases do not hide their open admiration for American style neoliberal celebrity politics and economics. 

But now the elephant in our African solidarity anti-colonial room is the renewed intention by Donald Trump to invade Venezuela physically.  He had previously tried the same via what was called Operation Gedeion where the USA sponsored a group of former Venezuelan soldiers to try and take over Caracas via an ocean landing in 2020. 

That failed.

What has since happened is that in 2025, Trump is accusing Venezuela of being a drug trafficking hub and enabler to the USA.  A point that has been disputed not only by mainstream global media but also expectedly by the Venezuelan government itself.  There is no direct evidence linking the Maduro government to any forms of international drug smuggling.

And yet now they are faced with the USA’s largest warship and aircraft carrier, the Gerald Ford in the vicinity of their international waters. And with an imminent threat of a physical invasion by the USA.

Maduro and the Venezuelan military have, and understandably so, tried to shore up their nationalism and regional solidarity to counter the intentions of the USA. 

As Africa, given our experiences of these type of ‘neo-liberal’ invasions in countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)- remember who killed Lumumba? Or in Libya and Sudan.  

Before we even mention the intentions of the Trump administration in one of our largest populated countries, Nigeria, over convoluted claims about the alleged mass killing of Christians. 

Or in South Africa where Trump humiliated President Ramaphosa by accusing him of a genocide against Dutch origin Afrikaners as well as the recent announcements he has made about the recent G20 summit.

As an African and Zimbabwean, I have no option but to stand with the people of Venezuela. Mainly because I have been taught about the historical nastiness of imperialism, racism and neo-colonialism. 

But also more significantly because I do not have an inferiority complex that assumes that what the USA or the global north says is ‘democracy’ is what should be considered a given.

 I understand the complexities of global capital and how it intends to run the world for profit at the expense of human life.  This regrettably includes its pillaging via war and globally financialized capital  of sovereign states in contravention of the United Nations (UN) Charter that holds all human beings to be universally equal. No matter their race, religion, language or place of origin.

It is my prayer that at some point as Africans, at least through the African Union and the Southern African Development Community, we see through the veneer of an expected differentiation between ourselves and cdes in South America. And condemn any invasion of Venezuela before it occurs. For the record and for historical posterity.

*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity

 

  

 

 

Monday, 24 November 2025

Remembering Covid19 from a Zimbabwean Perspective.

By Takura Zhangazha*

This may be a very sensitive subject matter so please read-on with caution. Based on your own individual experience(s).

It is sensitive because it is a conversation we rarely now have in contemporary Zimbabwe. 

Almost as though we refuse to remember that  the Covid19 in 2019 pandemic ever historically occurred. In our lifetimes. 

Or that lives, many lives, were lost.  And families were affected. From the immediate to the extended. 

Inclusive of our health, education and working environments.

We no longer talk about it formally in relation to the state and its expected roles. Or how global pharmaceutical companies reacted to the same said pandemic. Including limiting supplies of vaccines or in other instances gatekeeping knowledge on equitable global solutions. 

Or even within our own families and the ostracisation that came with coughs , flues, sneezes and requirements for oxygen which was almost like gold at that time. 

It was a very painful national period. We lost many relatives, friends and work colleagues at that time. 

And we will never forget the very real pain we went through. Nationally or personally. 

But the Covid19 pandemic occurred. We could not control it 100%. Nor could we foresee its full impact on society. 

What we could not do is walk away as if it never occurred. 

Tragically and regretably, it did. 

In its occurrence it changed who we thought we were and now who we are. 

Both societally and within the the ambit of medicinal and epidemiological science. 

This being a reality we still refuse to embrace until it hits us from China, the United States of America (USA) or the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). 

As popularly argued as sources of major biological epidemics or pandemics globally. Via Hollywood and social media as it is expanding to create awkward global hegemonic contestations. 

What we, in Zimbabwe, have not nationally discussed is the aftermath of what the pandemic of Covid19 meant to all of us.

Politically, economically and socially. Or in some instances in relation to mental health challenges at an individual or collective workplace level. 

Covid19 changed as is generally now given our ways of working, formally. More so if you were in a white collar job. It also changed how the work on the 'ground' differed from work 'online'. 

While at the same time, in its aftermath, pushing us toward a cheapening of both physical and online (internet based) labour.

With the latter being more preferable.  

What we, as Zimbabweans have not come to terms with, officially and unofficially is the fact of the aftermath of Covid19. 

And this is not about healing from loss of lives. It is beyond that. 

Instead it is about the gaps that have ignored the fact of our national being. 

Indeed we lost lives but we did not learn from that experience.  

We did not react with a necessary urgency to our health services for the people. We claimed that China was key in our recovery yet we still hear stories from the mainstream media of a delipidated health system. 

We still have children that are disadvantaged in the national education system as was the case during the pandemic

And we still yet have war veterans that cannot tell the difference of our before and after the pandemic. 

In the long and short of any argument we have not reflected enough on what the Covid19 pandemic has meant to our country. 

And what lessons we should draw from it. Whether you are rich or poor. 

Or in a rural or an urban-peri-urban area as your primary source of livelihood. 

What I know is that we need to sit down as a country to assess what Covid19 meant. And where want to go. 

From the shutdowns we had to encounter and in part evade In order to shop or visit the local bar. 

Through to the re-opening of our commercial society and assumptions of a return to normalcy as backed by national government. 

After the re-opening of society after Covid19 we half thought we were going to have better health services, education, public transport and access to water. 

This has not turned out to be true. 

We have a greater concerted attempt at privatising the state, state resources as if Covid19 never happened. 

It's almost like wiping out an historical epoch. 

But as we say, sing, "tungamirai tondosangana ikoko". 

The people will recover.

*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity. 








Thursday, 20 November 2025

Social-Humanities Studies Remain Key for Zimbabwe’s Progressive Future.

By Takura Zhangazha*

Whenever there are contemporary discussions about for example Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Zimbabwe, Africa and most of the Global South, there is always the question of ‘language’.  Both as an historical identity theme but also its algorithmic implications where and when it concerns the internet, social media and new technologies. 

These discussions tend to be somewhat lopsided in favour of what we now know to be very real technology.  Mainly because you cannot quite beat electricity, technological gadgets (computers, televisions, mobile phones, tablets) by word of mouth.  We tend to react to them more than they react to us and our contextual societal/cultural and in part, political-economic needs.

This is also dovetailed with what we know formally as the Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) in our current and many other’s educational curriculums. 

Because its priority is what is obtaining largely in the physics realm. Where life is determined largely by given geophysical and technological facts.

While at the same time assuming a specific (global) universality of  physical/natural sciences as they relate to their ironic cultural origins in Western countries.

It is from this key point that we need to examine the status of social science studies in Zimbabwe.  

With an initially regrettable point being that they are being placed on an academic national backfoot. 

Almost as a repetition of our national academic history where social sciences, education, arts (music, theatre, painting, sculpturing), journalism, political science, economics, anthropology, sociological, religious and historical studies were frowned upon.

Whether as promotable professional qualifications for primary and secondary level education young Zimbabweans. 

Or within our current economic context, again based on technological and economic livelihood trends, for those that pursued these social science related qualifications and are faced with the dilemma of being caricatured for having them (kushoorwa).

The reality of the matter is that social sciences are in deep trouble.  Not in relation to their epistemological/ knowledge production importance.  

But more because they are less recognized as nodes of knowledge significance professionally or otherwise by Zimbabwean society.  More so by the state and private business/capital. 

This point requires a throwback moment. 

When, for example the Chiadzwa diamond rush occurred in Manicaland in the mid 2000s, young cdes abandoned school to seek fortunes in the now same said infamous diamond fields. 

Some of them would find these fortunes via arduous physical circumstances and return to the village to laugh at their former struggling teachers.  

Thereby demeaning the all-important teaching profession in Zimbabwe.

Or to give another example.  Those that were studying the ‘arts’ in high school were generally derided for pursuing potential careers in which no major money could be made. Hence most high schools have changed a pure arts curriculum to mix it up with business and science.  

With the key argument being that it is a ‘global trend’ for students to be eligible to go to universities abroad.

The truth of the matter is that in those educational systems that are ‘abroad’ they have never and most likely will never abandon their social sciences.  Be it in the teaching profession, history, journalism, political science or anthropology among others.

Contradict this with our newfound over-enthusiasm for STEM. Without cultural and historical context.  

And at the clear expense of social sciences that independently and academically investigate our national historical political and economic culture. 

Without the propaganda that we are witnessing today where even music, art, religion and history all appear to be for sale to the highest political bidder!

As a penultimate point, I once had a fairly deep but non-academic discussion on this matter of the undying importance of the social sciences with a colleague.

We argued about the meaning of African culture, its metamorphosis in the age of the demeaning of social science studies and the expansion of captive AI.  

We could not come to an agreement on the fact of how we are interacting, as Africans, with technology. 

The key differences we had were on matters to do with, as ridiculous as it may seem, the impact of the ‘light bulb’ or the ‘medium is the message' moment as argued by a Canadian- British academic, McLuhan.

I argued that we need to contextualize technology and assumptions of a more advanced global West.  He argued, in retort, that all of this doesn’t matter anymore because the world will invariably become one global technological village. 

I still disagreed as did he with me. 

I only sort of won him over where and when I assiduously referred to Antonio Gramsci and the theory of ‘hegemony’ while at the same time referring to Kwame Nkrumah’s argument on Neo-Colonialism as the last stage of Imperialism.   

Key to the discussion however was the fact that we cannot abandon our social sciences as though we are throwing out the proverbial baby with the bathwater. Or to put it into context, ‘kuramwira munda kumakudo’ (to abandon your fields to the baboons)

I am a firm beliver in the importance, necessity and historic importance of our social sciences. 

And I am not a fan of STEM within our national and African contexts.  Indeed while we may be able to compete haphazardly on this (STEM), we need to retain a grounded understanding of our own being. As Zimbabweans and as Africans.

And this comes from your local geography, history, literature teacher. Your local anthropologist who explains Great Zimbabwe.  

Or your historian who tells you of the liberation struggle, the working peoples struggle. 

Including your teacher, journalist, spirit medium, pastor/priest who helps explain events as they occur in the contemporary.

Lastly, my colleague and I joked that the last social science standing in this convoluted age of STEM and AI, is probably religion. Though we (finally) agreed that everything does not belong to Jesus.  It belongs to progressive human consciousness.

*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, 11 November 2025

The Rural Laughing at the Urban: Zimbabwe's Reverse Development

By Takura Zhangazha*

A close relative of mine, after a recent family function and a couple of the inebriating waters (maSuper) jokingly said,

 " Sekuru, munotiseka varikuno kumamisha asi hatina zvatinoshaya!...Tine mombe, mbudzi, huku, minda, mvura nerugare rwamusingawani kumadhorobha!"

Translated and paraphrased he basically said in good humour, 

"You laugh at us here in the 'reserves' but there are many things we have here. We have cattle, goats, chickens, ploughing fields, water and rural peace which you do not have in urban centres." 

Additional conversations centered around toilets, running water wherein he countered with arguments on how even in Harare we do not have running water on a regular basis. And asked about the difference with him and his well. 

He also boasted about his solar system and how it at least charges his phones and how after he affords a television and satellite television he will be able to watch football. 

His was a general comparative lifestyle analysis. In the midst of inebriation. But he knew what he was saying would stab at my own urban consciousness. 

Though he did not know that his humour driven input also had the double edged sword of a potentially catastrophic wish for an uncontrollable urbanisation of his (and my own) rural area. 

But his own personal experience of raising children who would eventually depart for Harare, Bulawayo, Mutare, Masvingo and Johannesburg taught him a key lesson. Moreso when the only return from their departures were grandchildren. Ones he had to look after, send to school and only watch them depart as they also came of age into the same cauldrons of the urban. 


There is however a shift, hence the humour of it. 

There is a new rural-urban prioritisation of Zimbabwean existence. Not necessarily because of its proximity to home but more because rural lifestyles can be modernised. 


And this is not a difficult point to make. The urban lifestyles are increasingly ephemeral for many young (majority) Zimbabweans. 

They argue that they need to retain a home where they are not asked about rent, bills beyond what the local traditional authority wants. Or also beyond the political party expects. 

Outside of the ambit of the urban municipality until a point where they feel they are comfortable with its rules and regulations.  

So there is a scramble for this type of land without too many questions asked. Inclusive of land barons after the Fast Track Land Reform Programme (FTLRP). 

 With the latter having taken control of new peri-urban residential settlements based on their proximity to major cities. And also their ability to weave their way through local councils (opposition or ruling party ones). 

Either way our property business boomed as a result of our default nationalisation of urban land for individual profit. 

What this urban planning mess has created however is an observatory angle from the rural. Not only because it is not sustainable but more because of the real social welfare back up problems it causes. 

Whereas the rural to urban problems were more significant, it is the urban to rural ones that are more significant now. 

Young Zimbabweans, due to the competitive nature or urban life are sending their offspring back 'kumusha'. Even as they live in new sprawling urban settlements in various urban corners of the country. 

Now, I gave the anecdotal example of my relative laughing at us 'urbans' struggling with everyday life.  

The main reason I did that is because the rural Zimbabwean is correct to laugh at the rest of us. Moreso those that think the urban lifestyle is always superior. 

It is evidently preferable as we were taught in geography about what was then referred to as the 'bright lights syndrome'. 

Except that with solar power the bright lights, after a struggle can be at your home or local shopping centre. 

So that's why the rural can easily laugh at the urban now. There are no inferiority complexes as of old. 

The key difference is in understanding national consciousness. 

We are all equal. Even if though in the 1980s, 1990s, 2000s Harare, Bulawayo, Mutare, Gweru, Masvingo, Kwekwe and Marondera (I love that town) we were aspirants.

The question that arises is the sustainability of our lifestyles. 

The cdes in the rural are awaiting our return. Dead or alive (mostly dead) to prove a point. This being that we needed to balance both and not look at the rural as 'escapism'. But more a sense of belonging. 

*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity 

Tuesday, 4 November 2025

When Tanzania Politically Sneezes, the Rest of Africa/Southern Africa Coughs.

Historically and in the Present.

By Takura Zhangazha*

In a very recent online discussion concerning democracy and governance with colleagues based in the Diaspora I was asked to talk about the Southern African Development Community (SADC).  This was in relation to the historical role the regional body had in the liberation struggles of as its name suggests of Southern Africa. 

It was a difficult question given the fact that we are no longer fighting liberation wars in the same said Southern African region. 

We are now more electoral in our political questions and contestations for power.  History may remain important but it is no longer central to any notions of retaining popular political support during elections.

Ditto Tanzania. 

That is one of the most liberatory countries in Southern and broader Africa.   There is no singular Southern African country that cannot claim that it did not receive help in both civilian and military struggles against direct settler colonialism from the people of the then Tanganyika which became the United Peoples Republic of Tanzania and Zanzibar.  Under the leadership of the now still ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCMP) party and through the years from Julius Nyerere, Al Hassan Mwinyi, Benjamin Mkapa, Jakaya Kikwete and John Magufuli. 

 Not only was it one of the founding countries of the the then Organisation of African Unity (OAU) now the African Union (AU).  It was also a founding member of the Southern African liberation oriented Frontline States (FS) together with Zambia and Mozambique.   The FS were to eventually become the historical precursor to two regional organizations.  These were the Southern African Development Coordination Committee (SADCC) and eventually what we now know as SADC.  

So whenever Tanzania politically sneezes the rest of Southern and broader Africa coughs.

This has been the case in the most recent disputed Tanzanian general election that saw the still controversial election of incumbent president Samia Saluhu and the parliamentary victory of the CCMP in both the mainland and also the island of Zanzibar. 

A decent number of Pan Africanists like myself are in shock at how the narrative of these recent elections have turned out.   Their elections have never been this controversial.  But as argued by some it was always going to come to a head. At some point.  Particularly after the discovery of rare earth minerals, gas and oil in the country and the death of former president John Magufuli who was keen on centralized control of the state.

The key question that is emerging is that what has changed in Tanzania beyond what we already knew about its electoral tendencies. 

The reality of the matter is that it is a society that has changed in its political outlook mainly based, as most African states are now, on a change of national consciousness. Contrived (foreign economic interests) or even if by default.  With the default element relating more to urban and rural divides and the rise of not only a new African cultural materialism.

But more importantly a generational praxis gap about the liberation struggle and contemporary lived political and economic realities of many young Africans.

Three things therefore come back into vogue when we reflect in a Pan Africanist sense on Tanzania and its recent political events and elections.

The first one is how its founding president Julius Nyerere once argued about the ambiguity of the meaning of democracy.  He once intoned, writing a Foreword for Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni’s biography that the ‘mechanisms of democracy are not the meaning of democracy’.    He also, in an address to the South Africna Parliament as invited by Nelson Mandela that ‘democracy is not like Coca Cola’.  And I am paraphrasing here, he probably said something that it cannot just be exported everywhere like a commodity.

In the second instance we have to reflect on our own continually disputed African elections and their cycles.  Or in South Africa’s case, their increasing conservatism despite having fought a protracted African liberation struggle.  

As Nyerere argued, we have to think beyond elections in their occurrence.  What matters most is what happens in-between them.

We cant think of elections as weather cyclones that occur every five or six years simply in order to share a populist national cake. We have to reflect more deeply on this and how younger generations understand the meaning of elections beyond mimicry of what happens in the global north that creates the likes of Trump and chainsaw totting Argentinian president Javier Milei. 

In the third and final instance, we have to understand the internal complexities of each our Southern African countries. Tanzania included. Beyond the internet and globalized media narratives.  For example I do not speak Swahili, nor if I was to go to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Lingala. What the majority of cdes in these two aforementioned countries perceive as democratic progress may not be as universal as we deem. Or prefer.  Not because we are better educated not only in English languages but because we are sadly increasingly ahistorical in our understanding of universalism.

To conclude, the recent elections in Tanzania are indeed a blight on Southern Africa.  Not only because of the significant historicity of that country to the region and the African continent.   They can and should have been done better.  But it will never take away the importance of Tanzania and its iconic role in a people centered Pan Africanism.  No matter the undercurrents of global international relations, geo-political private capital economic interests.

All that matters for now, and it is sad it has come to this, is that Tanzania recovers. And that its people return to safety, security, solidarity across rural and urban divides.

*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity