By Takura Zhangazha*
Collectively celebrating the advent of a new year is risky
business in Zimbabwe. Each New Year has signified more an event than the
beginning of any particularly optimistic time based process. Unless of course
we are dealing with the personal such as the year one tied the knot, changed a
job or managed to bring another Zimbabwean into being.
But where we are dealing with broader societal questions,
very limited little new or improved circumstances come in attendance with the
advent of a new year. So optimism is usually
in popularly short supply in relation to the political economy. In this sphere,
time tends to happen to us. We do not happen to time.
Mainly because we have had one ruling party with the same
leader for the last 33 years and we have therefore learnt not to expect
anything spectacularly better with each passing year. This is perhaps due to
the possible reality that a majority of our country’s citizens are historically
aware of the tendencies of the ruling party vis-à-vis its desire to hold on to
political power at all costs.
Even where it is self evidently incapable of bringing a necessary political optimism
to the passage of time.
Or alternatively even where there is an assumedly strong opposition
political party which, as it has turned out in 2013, is incapable of fully embracing
its historical and generational democratic
task.
Furthermore where our private sector has over the years enamoured itself to short
term investments that are based primarily on proximity to the state,
corruption, cronyism and consumerism without innovation or social democratic responsibility.
So technically, 2014 is most likely to be merely another numerical
year in the lived collective realities of the people of Zimbabwe. One in which political and economic affairs will be
exercised under the aegis of undemocratic state capitalism and opposition politics
without organic nor people centered character.
It would however be unfair to end it here. Since optimism is
a function of all progressive intellectualism or even sometimes politics, it
can turn out differently in at least four respects.
The first being that of the ability of the ruling Zanu Pf
party to engage in serious processes that lead to leadership transiton and
therefore the possibility of political change in the country. Given the fact
that Zanu Pf celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2014 and has an
elective congress there is no better opportunity for it demonstrate its
understanding, even if long delayed, of the fact that no one leader or
leadership can rule a country for as long as has been the case.
Such tendencies are retrogressive and inimical to human
progress anywhere in the world. For 2014 to be different, Zanu Pf has to select
a new leadership or at least make it self evident that it is in the process of
doing so pending its elective congress. Where it fails to do so, any pessimism
over and about the new year will unfortunately be justified.
Secondly, for 2014 to be a progressive year, the opposition political
parties must demonstrate an internal and external commitment to democratic processes.
Paying lip service to democracy is no longer enough as was evidenced by the
shocking (even though controversial) defeat of the MDCs at the hands of Zanu Pf
after four years ensconced in the comfort of the now defunct inclusive government.
The opposition has to
disabuse itself of messianic tendencies of its individual leaders and function
more on the principle of democratic collective responsibility than pseudo
personality cults that are reminiscent more of blind fanaticism without democratic
principles, values and belief. Party congresses
must be held, even if they are extraordinary ones and they must be held on the
grounds of ideals, principles and democratic action. Where the opposition fails
to do so, again, 2014 remains a bleak political collective experience of time for
Zimbabweans.
Thirdly, capital or the private sector as it is commonly
referred to, must do its level best to negotiate more on the ability it has to contribute
not only corporate taxes but more on the creation of
technological innovation for the national
economic advancement.
This would include none abstract arguments about ‘beneficiation’
but direct participation on knowledge transfer through business for the benefit
of the economy and in order to stem our unemployment levels.
Capital’s extractive tendencies have to be placed within the
framework of social democracy and not state capitalism as is currently being
propositioned by government’s Zimbabwe Agenda for Sustainable Social and Economic
Transformation (ZimAsset).
Public-Private partnerships should not be a synonym for the privatization
of basic services such as water, and Capital needs to be more honest about this
if it is to stem eventual targeting by a desperate government where and when
its profit motives are called into question.
Fourthly and finally, 2014, will be an honest year if civil society
organizations sang less for their supper and more on behalf of the principles,
values and people that they claim to represent.
From the war veterans, through to the human rights related organizations, there needs to be a new attitude toward democratic honesty that resides less in the boardrooms of resources to those that are democratically organic without false incrementalism or dictatorial sophistry. Even where it seems against the donor or political party grain.
From the war veterans, through to the human rights related organizations, there needs to be a new attitude toward democratic honesty that resides less in the boardrooms of resources to those that are democratically organic without false incrementalism or dictatorial sophistry. Even where it seems against the donor or political party grain.
As it is, historical precedent indicates that we have no
tangible reason to be collectively optimistic as a country about the incoming
New Year. Save for what may personally
occur to us, broadly spoken for, unless we demonstrate commitment toward occurring
on Time, and not Time occurring on us, 2014 will be a case of ‘Now you see it,
now you don’t.’
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)