Insignificant announcement for those who read my blog, takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com I shall be taking a break from posting on it. Fingers crossed, I will be able to work on an at least 10k word write up titled "A Treatise for an Equitable Zimbabwean Society" This should be until the end of November 2022. #Zimbabwe (And I am only posting this in the hope I can keep my promise 😃So even if I don't, hazvina mhosva! Mubikirei! )
Monday, 17 October 2022
Saturday, 8 October 2022
Being Zimbabwean #Zimbabwe
By Takura Zhangazha*
There is a book called “Becoming Zimbabwe. A history fromthe Pre-Colonial Period to 2008”. It is
one written by two amazing academics that I personally admire. Namely Professor Mlambo and Professor Raftopolous
and was published in 2009 at the height of our political and economic crisis
during that time.
It was and remains an amazing academic project. What it however probably didn’t answer,
beyond its time based historical event narratives, was what it meant to be
Zimbabwean. Beyond how we “became Zimbabweans”. Even in the days of poignant polarization of
our people. It had its own nuances that
have stayed with us today. This being an
historical narrative of Zimbabwe that sought to indicate that we were not only
a failed state but probably a failed people.
But in this brief weekend write up I do not want to focus on
the book cited above. I am more curious
about what it means in the contemporary to “Be a Zimbabwean”. As opposed to becoming one.
And this is a very complicated question that the fewest of
us are willing or able to answer. With
the easiest one being that like most of
Southern and East African countries we are immediate constructs of post-colonial
settler states. Something that is hard
to swallow given that fact in the majority of Southern African states we
undertook wars of liberation that should have led to new revolutionary
societies. We did not and with hindsight
could not given the fact of the Cold War, the Non-Aligned Movement and the South
African Anti-Apartheid movement that we had to contend with in the 1980s.
In the contemporary and to be specific to my own country, Zimbabwe,
our sense of belonging is fundamentally defined by our birthplaces(s). As long as it was within the territory that
we now call Zimbabwe. The only catch is
that again it is not that simple. We
also attach to this sense of belonging, issues to do with culture, language and
gender in order to reaffirm the element of being what is referred to in
anthropology as being an “autochthon”. Or
an original inhabitant. Geographically,
culturally and in some cases, spiritually.
But we now know that being Zimbabwean is a very complicated experience
in the contemporary. By way of age,
ideas and material well being and not necessarily in that order.
I will however start with the issue of age and experience by
way of analysis. We perceive of our being Zimbabwean through the lenses of not
only what we personally experienced but also because it was not our fault. But the fault of the then adults. I remember having a heated conversation with
a very good comrade Thomas Deve (MHSRIP) on this matter where I mistakenly
sought to blame his ‘age group’ for the hard times Zimbabwe had fallen upon. He
brushed me off and reminded me of the meaning of the term “generation”.
Or when I interacted with two specific war veterans, Cde
Dzino (Wilfred Mhanda) and Cde Freedom Nyamubaya.
In another instance and in my personal heady days of what
was serious political activism, I told one of my then mentors Professor
Lovemore Madhuku that in everything political that we do, we do for posterity. And with due process. But I couldn’t argue with his then struggle
credentials and I lost that debate.
In this it meant that being Zimbabwean appeared to be a very
political standpoint. An almost either “you are with us or against us one”. In absolute terms.
But I do not think absolutely. I always try and see what the future holds.
Based on the actions of those in leadership and even ‘supporter’ positions in
the present.
In this, there is an assumption of political correctness
about what it means to be a Zimbabwean. Either
one is fighting the status quo or defending it.
The assumption being that there can be no other way to be a
Zimbabwean. A perception that is the
direct product of our many years of political polarisation.
On the factor of ideas or to put it more directly, ideology,
we are almost lost at the proverbial sea. We can only hold on either to our
radical black nationalism or pander to the neoliberal ideological intentions of
the global north and east. Hence our
governments rather vacuous term of “ being a friend to all and an enemy to none”.
Its as abstract as it demonstrates a
naie perception of how international relations work. Eventually we will take a side as a country
in the global affairs of things. One
that is already known by those that do not like us.
But again, just for emphasis. Ideologically we are at sea. At both the elite and ordinary but poor people
levels. The only “idea” that seems to bind either of the two is religion.
But what is most important in being Zimbabwean is the idea
of ‘materialism’. It is our fundamentally
measure of success and being. Something that
is not unique to us had we not undertaken since the Fast Track Land Reform
Programme (FTLRP). Except that in such
an assumed revolutionary process we mimic those that we sought to replace. Both
materially and ideologically.
So what does it mean to be a Zimbabwean now? I do not know.
Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Monday, 3 October 2022
Abstract Take: The Passage of Time and Zimbabwean Politics.
*By Takura Zhangazha
In our Zimbabwean politics we rarely discuss one key
issue. This is the passage of time and
its impact on historical, contemporary and future perspectives on how we view
ourselves and our country.
It is an interesting issue in so far as it relates to how we
combine views on what time or age in our politics can come to mean. Or how we are wont to have short memories of
events that have come to define the general political culture that we live with
in the present. As well as how it may shape the future.
Not just politically though.
We consider time in many respects.
From the religious to the economic.
For example, in our churches we often say that ‘time is not ours’, an
adage that is reflective of the Christian bibles teachings and also indicative
of sad moments that we undergo such as the loss of a loved one. Or in economic
terms with the occurrence of a serious material misfortune that we then hope
that with the passage of time we will eventually be able to solve.
What is more interesting for some of us who are almost born
frees (born in the late 1970s) is the fact that we are almost on the time
conscious horizon of having learnt of the significant time of the liberation
struggle, experienced post-independence/freedom, its eventual challenges and
assumptions of a return to revolutionary values of the ruling party Zanu
Pf. While at the same time being key
elements of the trade, women’s and student union movements that would seek to
challenge the former’s hegemony in our nascent adult years. This was in the
late 1990s and as we approached the millennium.
In some cases we looked at time as almost historically static.
On either side of the political divide. On the one hand war veterans assumed
that they could revert back to the heady days of the idealism of the liberation
struggle. While on the side of the
social movements led by trade unions and civil society organisations there was
an assumption that because of the passage of time and generational
demographics, time was no longer on the side of the ruling establishment. In fact with the latter it was almost a given
that because of their long duree dominance in national politics, the
inevitability of the passage of time was their primary nemesis.
What is more impressionable however is the fact of the symbolism
that we attach to the passage of time in our politics. Or the lack thereof. As well as how we may
possibly misunderstand it and its role in our political being. As abstract as that may appear.
There are three issues I would therefore like to raise about
the passage of time and our Zimbabwean politics.
The first is that the fundamental national shaping occurrence
of the liberation struggle against settler colonialism cannot be wished
away. Historically or in the present and
in the future. No matter our divergent
views on the actual experience and the years it took to achieve national
independence, inclusive of the factionalism that accompanied it, that fact of
that time and struggles for emancipation is undeniable. And never mind populists who argue on behalf
of the settler Rhodesian state They are in the wrong on this one.
The second issue is that the passage of time, as historians
generally advise, constructs cultural and political societal meaning. One that talks
to values, principles and beliefs that even the original actors in the passage
of specific epochs of time wish to last beyond themselves. Including new actors who seek to borrow from
previous time epoch values to garner newer legitimacies as they relate again to
‘times of struggle’, the present and the future.
In this is the language of assumed betrayal of major
revolutionary and historical processes, values and principles. Though the ambiguity is always about global
political and economic dynamics as they occur. Time and values therefore
interlope and become a new beast that seeks validation where it need not
to. And time inclusive of age becomes a
central consideration in any new politics when it suits specific narratives
that are ahistorical and at best ephemeral.
The final consideration I have on the matter of time and
Zimbabwean politics is the clear lack of intergenerational praxis. Or to put it simply, a lack of a shared basic
consciousness between various age groups in Zimbabwe about what we are, can be
and should be. This being a specific carry-over
of colonial false consciousness that assumes specifics about what is “success”
and what is “failure”. Both at
individual and collective societal levels.
And to get a clearer view of this just crosscheck our education system
and how unequal we desire it to be with our perpetual pursuit of a British
education system as better than our own. And again our perpetual occupation of
former privileged social spaces as our own.
Not only physically but by way of cultural and other desires.
To conclude, the passage of time constructs specific meaning
that we need to harness on the basis of our intrinsic values and
principles. These are generally universal
and based on our long term interactions with the United Nations in pursuit of
human equality. We should never forget
that.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Saturday, 24 September 2022
Contemporary Political and Cultural Entrapment in Zimbabwe.
By Takura Zhangazha*
There are
many reasons why political opinions and cultural practices are formed. Both in
relation to general society and also individuals. These range from history itself,
cultural, religious practices as they shape and influence a given political
economy. With the latter being an
encompassing of everything cited above.
But this a universal
societal given as established by academics and thinkers in multiple
disciplines. Yet I still find Zimbabwe
to be in a uniquely different situation on this subject matter. Particularly where we consider our last
quarter of a century (25 years).
We have established
a political and cultural system designed for an assumption of continued
permanence and not progress. Both by way
of individual perception and in collective societal reality.
This is
mainly because our national political economy since 1997 created at least three
things. A highly polarized political
culture; a hybrid neoliberal economy that mixed radical nationalism with smash
and grab capitalism; and a social system that prioritized individualism and
high levels of religiosity.
The
uniqueness of this lies fundamentally in the now given historical fact of the
Fast Track Land Reform Programme (FTLRP).
And it’s far reaching impact in how Zimbabweans perceive of themselves
and also how they want to be perceived by others. These others being those in the sub-region,
the African continent, the East and more significantly in the West.
I say significantly
in the West because it is the latter that has the greater global and media
reach to control the narrative of what Zimbabwe is, should be and also can be. In the past, the present and regrettably so,
in the future.
It is a narrative
that our current ruling establishment has sought to counter with reference to history
and radical nationalism. As well as seeking the protection of regional and
continental bodies while also getting key protection from Russia and China who
are permanent members of the UN Security Council.
These
narratives have however had a greater impact on Zimbabwean lives than we are
wont to agree upon. From political polarization
through to challenging economic circumstances wrought on by both politics and
unilateral sanctions.
And this is
where our own agency as ordinary Zimbabweans comes in. There are certain
matters that we now consider permanent in a polarized political and economic
fashion. Mainly because in dealing the
story or narrative of what Zimbabwe was, is, can be, we have become entrapped
in our own experiences which then shape some of our now almost now unmovable opinions
either side of political divides.
And I will
give the two most evident examples in our society. The first is the general immovability of a
ruling party supporter on the matter of either the liberation struggle or the
radical nationalism that was the FTLRP.
Not just because they believe in both but more because at one point or
the other they were involved in either. It shaped their individual political
experience. And because of the
narratives I cite above they are persuaded that no matter what happens the ‘enemy’
is always at the door. But with the caveat that they cannot in and of
themselves believe that after all they have gone through, they can be found to
have been at fault for their actions and opinions. They have no choice but to
hold onto what they know and believe. Whether or not it can pass some sort of rationality
test.
In the
second example, if you take an opposition supporter and ask their views they
will reflect similar immovability of their views. This is mainly because they
either suffered at the hands of the ruling party via the state of the economy from
1997 or due to political violence being meted on them or their relatives particularly
in rural areas. Their views tend to be strident
on this and no matter what handshake of peace they are offered they do not
trust it. Even for example during the
period of the unity government in 2009-2013. It is of limited consequence that their
narrative of Zimbabwe then resonates with that of the West because of not only
their anger but also their experiences.
In these
two examples I have given it is also clear that in order to have one narrative
triumph over another there is a turn to what I consider the perceived and
currently popular ‘finality’ of religion or God as the arbiter of a true and
expected victor. By both narratives. Meaning
therefore anyone that loses either an election or property still has a firm
belief that no matter what a religious deity remains on their side and
therefore they have to stick to their proverbial guns.
In all of
this we get caught up in a trap. We cannot let go of our experienced actions
and reactions because it would appear that it is all we would know. Especially
politically and even where new developments, locally or globally, indicate that
it no longer makes sense to hold on to them.
Meaning we may have entered a specific phase where dogma is our cultural
staple diet. Again based on narratives
that remain entrenched with no urgency that they be resolved.
For this brief
write up I used the term ‘entrapment’ deliberately. It would appear that we are now prisoners of
our own political and economic experiences.
To the extent that we appear unchangeable or unable to reimagine what
remains possible beyond the victory of either political or economic hegemons that
we support.
We may need
to take time to pause and rethink more carefully what we share in common in our
diversity and stop holding on to narratives that blur a better future in their
stubborn consistency.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Wednesday, 14 September 2022
Dilemma of Political Populism in Zimbabwe
*By Takura Zhangazha
Political populism is a well-studied term. Or at least now it is more ‘googled’ than
studied. And it is also no longer as
much a contentious issue as it was in the heady days of political ideological
argumentation. It has however
generally changed formats historically across the globe. Especially after the end of the Cold War and
the assumed triumph of neoliberalism and the now proverbial prediction that the
ascendancy of the latter signified “an end of history”.
In its contemporary occurrence, particularly in our own
Zimbabwean context (and probably many other African country contexts) populism
is not just political. It is reflective
of a national culture, including enabling communications technologies, national
and global political economies. Together
with attendant historical processes as they occur or are remembered.
In its essentially ‘us’ versus ‘them’ simple format
political populism pits an assumed elite versus what would be considered “the
people”. With the people being in
radical ascendancy in the hope of victory or conquest.
What is interesting is the interchangeability of both terms,
the ‘elite’ and the ‘people’. With the
question being who represents who? And at what point?
Even more significantly, populism generally requires messianic
political figures. Who may or may not have some sort of ideological grounding but
would all the same be in complete control of whatever agenda they are setting.
Even if it creates or follows general political sentiment.
In Zimbabwe we have an interesting encounter with populism. It is a mixture of many things. A dabble of ideology, a heavy dose of national
emotion, religion, history and individualised political and economic experience. Not forgetting a specific mimicry of how it
occurs elsewhere on the African continent and globally.
The ‘dabble of ideology’ largely relates to nationalism as it
relates to history and the liberation struggle.
That on its own has been used by the ruling party to retain a certain
instrumental populism.
The “heavy dose of national emotion” relates to the general
anger over the passage of at least three decades at the state of the national
political economy since national independence. This has been used to great
effect by mainstream opposition parties or movements. And as aided and enabled
by an even heavier dose of religiosity and individualised materialist desires. With the latter being motivated by what we
see on television and on social media as being the assumedly enviable “good
life” of the global north. Aligned with an unbelievable intention and desire at
mimicry politics and its attendant recognition.
In contemporary African and global politics this is not
unique to Zimbabwe. It is populism that
led to colour revolutions in the last two decades. All of which were reversed almost at the blink
of an eye by either military coups, big business and/or global superpower
foreign policy interests.
The damaging end
effect of political populism is however not seen in the immediate. Mainly
because it is ephemeral and highly emotional. Only in the immediacy of its occurrence
or its moment. And this is a key
point. Political populism, whatever it
gets its progenitor, is unfortunately easily reversible and easily swayable in
the opposite direction of why it existed in the first place. Even if, with a dabble of ideology or religiosity
it had initially appeared noble. And
tragically it also costs peoples lives and livelihoods because it is never
designed to be organic with the people but with the political moment.
Again in our Zimbabwean context and in the contemporary we
have to accept the reality that our national politics are largely driven by
populism for many reasons. These as outlined above can range from some ideological
considerations of the liberation struggle, emotive anger at the state of the
economy, materialist individual desires and religion.
As such, we have come to stubbornly accept populism as
though it were progressive politics. Especially because it responds to our
emotions and waits for the next electoral cycle. It does not do posterity.
If one were to ask if in the short term there is an
alternative, I would despairingly say no. Mainly because this is a global and
inter-generational phenomenon. More so when it is based on the fact that our
democratic processes, particularly in Zimbabwe, are based on a first past the
post system at a majority of levels.
But in the long term I can easily argue that this is a dying
phenomenon that is dependent more on our own recognition of progressive
cultural and political habits based on our past, present and how we want to own
and imagine our national political futures.
To conclude, in conversation with some war veterans of
Zimbabwe’s second liberation struggle, one can sense the angst that they have
that a lot of young people do not understand or positively recognise their
national stature. This is not necessarily the young people’s fault. It is the coming to full circle of political
populism in its immediacy. And in the opposite direction.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Monday, 5 September 2022
#Kenya #Zimbabwe and the Disputability of Elections
I have been
keenly following the Kenyan 2022 election court case. Mainly because as a
Zimbabwean I have to reflect on electoral result disputes as they occur in my
own country. As it turns out the Supreme
Court of Kenya has decided, at law, that William Ruto is the duly elected president
of Kenya.
And the
reasons that court gave are varied. At
least on the nine (9) points that they gave. What is important is the fact of
the disputation of presidential election results. Both as a general expectation and as a
general electoral habit. A development
that remains completely understandable.
Even if
when presented before a court off law, the mathematics or legal argumentation
appears to fall short of expected requirements.
What is apparent
is the fact of all elections in Africa, South of the Sahara being expected to be
disputed. Or at least ending up at one constitutional
court or the other.
This is the
case in Kenya and Angola. As will be the
case in Zimbabwe, Botswana or Nigeria when they hold their next elections.
What remains
in vogue is the fact of the disputability of election results. And how such disputes will always end up
being presented to a Supreme or Constitutional Court. Together with the fact
that in most insistences this becomes an international relations issue. Almost as a force of habit. With the expectations that after every other
five year election period, this is actually an expectation. Meaning that no matter the assumptions of ‘electoral
reforms’ there will always be disputation as to the results. Even if the same assumptions are made in
Global North countries.
What is
apparent is the fact of an emerging culture that we should and can dispute electoral
results. For the sake of it. It is almost an electoral campaign that so
long we run for political office we should be able to dispute electoral results. Or in other words, we cannot lose an election. Especially if we have the sympathy of the Global
North and its foreign policy intentions.
In this
what emerges is the assumption of what is an election? Who actually votes and
for whom? Even if the candidate is as straight forward as can be, we have to
realise that it reflects more the interests of those that prefer that
particular candidate than they would an opposing one.
But this
may not matter as much. The essence of electoral
campaigns’ in contemporary Africa is a specific populism. One that manages materialist desire and
legality of the same. And this is a complicated
point. “We are what we are not. That is the paradox of fiction”. I am quoting here from Dambudzo Marechera
from his novella “The Black Insider”.
The fact of
disputation of elections is one that means we are what we are not. Our anticipation is that we will always have victory. Yet victory always eludes us. As though it
was a curse.
Our
abstract struggles at liberatory beings are those that tend to belong to the
immediate. The struggles for the organic
understanding of the future of the people of Zimbabwe is not abstract. It is immediate. And we know that those that fought the war of
liberation understand this. If they do not then we have to have a conversation about
the fact of the reality of what it meant actually fight the oppressor in the
most trying of circumstances.
It is
apparent that the liberation struggle was complicated. And that it remains an historical
reality we can never wish away. Even if
we were in the political opposition. The importance of Zimbabwean being is that
we do not dispute the war of liberation.
We also do not argue with the fact of desire for electoral change. Nor the reality that democracy has mutated to
mean many things to many people. Some in
power. Others close to power.
What we do
know is that democracy represents a political culture that is essentially about
posterity. It is not about the immediate.
And more about the future. Where
we embrace it for posterity we will be alright.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Tuesday, 23 August 2022
Pensions, Gas/ Oil in Muzarabani
By Takura Zhangazha *
I once
posted a tweet on how Muzarabani would never be the same again. With the benefit
of hindsight, I was one third correct and two thirds wrong. The one third is based on the fact that
there would be and is exploration of gas in the Zambezi valley that will change
not only its landscape but perceptions of what it would become. The two thirds where I was wrong was that I
assumed this is a project that would be designed to change local and global
perceptions of what it can possibly mean to have a national project that is
people centered.
On the
first third, the Muzarabani Invictus gas project is an intensive capital investment
one. Based on, you can guess it, globalized
financial capitalism. As a basic lesson
in how these global financialised capitalism things actually really work.
Zimbabwe
and Zimbabweans have always owned the potential gas deposits. Its our national
resource by birthright. Even if these
anticipated deposits were then ‘discovered’ via exploration initially by
experts hired by the French company Total and now to be explored by Invictus
with newer advanced gas or oil drilling technologies.
The major
difference has been the fact of our national government taking a free market
economic approach on mining. A process
it has referred to as the “ease of doing business”. In this, there is a prioritization of the
listing of investment companies on global stock exchanges in order to raise capital
for investment in Zimbabwe. It is blunt capitalism
based on speculative market profit intentions. And in order to keep the actual owners of the
specific commodity at bay. Especially
because of the capitalist assumption that they would never have raised the
required capital to invest in their own commodity.
In
following closely media reports on the Muzarabani gas investment I have realized
a number of issues. First among them
being that it is a high priority investment by not so new private players in
Zimbabwe. And that the state has a vested interest in this via what it has
called, in global capitalist parlance, a Sovereign Wealth Fund. One in which it hopes upon actual discovery
of gas, it can share the profit with the Australian stock exchange listed
company Invictus.
In this, it
has roped in pension funds that are both public and private, as reported by local
media website NewZWire, to invest in this highly speculative gas and oil
venture. The pension funds officially
declared that they are optimistic that we will find the gas and their
percentage shareholding in the Sovereign Wealth Fund will bring them a return
on their investment.
What
crossed my mind was the fact that the pension funds may have done this without
consulting the owners of the money. These being Zimbabweans who toil day and
night contributing monthly pensions for their inevitable retirement.
A friend familiar
with business explained that this is fairly normal. Because pensions, both
public and private function on the same pretext. They take government guaranteed money and
invest it where they deem fit. With or
without consultation with the actual pension holders. So if you have a National Social Security
Authority (NSSA) Zimbabwe pension you have no say on where proceeds from your
pension are re-invested. Especially if
you are young. It just appears on your statutory pay slip as an abstract
payment until you learn that there are many of you and it is a real determined
of your future in your older, retirement years.
To be
honest though, I really wrote this brief write up because of pensions and this
particular speculative investment in oil and gas in Muzarabani. Or any other investment that does not consult
the people that it is meant to benefit. The working people contributors to both
private and publicly owned pension funds.
One can
easily argue that this is “capitalism”. But we know from global economics that
this is what creates ‘oligarchs’ and to use a Rhumba term “ Big Mulemenas”.
Cdes that are in no way accountable for wealth acquired from nationally owned
resources. Cdes that eventually claim ownership of these same said resources as
their private property yet they were acquired via what should have been people
centered policy and political processes.
At the
stage it now is, it is near impossible to stop the Muzarabani gas exploration project.
In fact it may turn out to be an economic game changer.
The question that remains in vogue is for who? And why it has taken this
global financialised private capital particular format? Even in the so called
Second Republic of Zimbabwe.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Wednesday, 17 August 2022
An Overview of Zimbabwe’s Rural Political Economy 2022
By Takura Zhangazha*
Many years ago my brother and I had a discussion on the
meaning of the ‘rural’ in Zimbabwe. The discussion focused on how we could balance
the fact that we were originally from there via our parents and how in the moment
we had to confront the reality of success as being determined by urban
lifestyle expectations vis a vis the ‘rural’.
The key question we grappled with was whether urbanisation
of the rural was preferable. We agreed
on the technicality of this question.
There is no rural area that does not desire electricity or running
water. In this we also agreed that we
need to modernise the rural in order to achieve equitability in Zimbabwe’s
human development agenda.
We sort of got stuck in relation to customary and civil
law. We had to interrogate the question
of whether the rural in its modernisation was ready for a civil legal system. We never came to an agreement. And
this is a matter that remains outstanding between us.
Over the national Heroes holiday which is held every August,
I however noticed a number of emerging trends about our rural political
economy. Albeit from one district in
Masvingo but I am sure these are likely to be occurring elsewhere.
The first is that there is a default urban culture creep in
the rural. With or without the assistance
of central or local government. There is
an increasing use of battery power to charge mobile phones and listen to radio broadcasts.
Mostly via singular solar energy panels that connect to old car batteries or
newer smaller ones that are designed for that particular purpose.
There is the expansion of shopping centres in places that
were previously remote and isolated for basic goods and commodities. This also includes emerging bars and places of
leisure that immediately link up young rural Zimbabweans with entertainment
such as watching European football on generator or solar powered
televisions.
Another interesting factor has been the general expansion of
what we still refer to as ‘growth points’. These pre-urban areas have increased
residential settlements which are more formal and run by rural district
councils and in some instances land barons who know how to work the system about
land use permits and changes. Especially
for land that is in the immediate vicinity of these same said growth
points.
There is an evident rural-urban migration that transcends
what would have been previous rural-major city migrations of the past. Migratory patterns on the face of it appear
to be young rural men seeking employment opportunities in mining towns or
disused mining areas in various parts of the country. An employment term that
is commonly referred to as ‘chikorokoza’ in our local lingo. Though South Africa is still in vogue for
many of these young men as an option barring birth certificate and passport
access.
For young women, it is intra-rural migration that appears to
be unique. Particularly for the purposes
of providing domestic work services to the wealthier rural families. There is however still a decent number of
rural –urban migration to provide the same services in urban centres that is viewed
as a major employment option, even though it can be ephemeral particularly due
to the challenges caused by the Covid 19 lockdowns.
But perhaps what is more immediate is political perceptions
of what the future portends. There is a
clear generational gap in rural political consciousness. At least from my own personal
perspective. What I noticed was that
there was an eagerness by those that have been travelling between cities and
mining areas but based in the rural to demonstrate support for the opposition.
At least to me. And as motivated by what is clearly a desire to find the
elusive US dollar in the rural political economy. It is as emotional as it is populist in
fashion and form. Almost as a
declaration of desire, intent while being a testament to realistic placement in
the national political economy.
This includes historical recognition of previous episodes of
political violence and the general import of being defiant that older
generations are quick to remind younger ones of. With warnings of the danger of going against
the political grain of the ruling establishment in the rural realm.
There are many other nuances that I considered but did not
get enough of conversation on. These
include the directly gendered dimensions of the rural political economy.
Especially after the Covid 19 lockdowns and the changing role of young women in
bearing the brunt of job losses for breadwinners during this period. Or that of
the bubbling role of religion via new emergent small Christian church congregations
and allegations of witchcraft that occasionally emerged in casual
conversations. Or the increased uptake of
illicit alcohol and attendant violent episodes particularly with young men.
What I did get a sense of is that the rural provided a
temporary reprieve for many who had been working in cities and mining areas
during the lockdown. And that a probable
decent number of young Zimbabweans resorted to their parents\guardians in the
difficult economic times caused by lockdowns.
Particularly to look after their children while they sought new opportunities
locally and across the Limpopo or Save rivers.
To conclude, we have an increasingly urbanising/modernising rural
political economy. Both by way of
material developments or cultural desires (solar energy use, batteries,
enclosure of fields, expansion of growth points and default privatisation of
land ownership.) What I definitely got a sense of is that Zimbabwe’s rural
political economy is changing. Both by way of physical/human geography and culture.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Thursday, 28 July 2022
Individual Life Experience as National Consciousness in Zimbabwe.
By Takura Zhangazha*
Our Zimbabwean national consciousness is a debate we continuously need to engage and debate upon. Even if a decent number of us may consider it relatively abstract. But it must be had all the same. With the key question being “What really informs contemporary Zimbabwean national consciousness?” By way of history, generational interactions and the multiplicity of its progenitors in the present. And as a result in the future.
I am also
aware that this is a Fanonian question and that a decent number of comrades may
imagine this to be part of the past than it is of the present. Let alone the future.
What is
increasingly in vogue however about this national consciousness question in our
post independence era is that initially it is no longer popularly considered to
be an urgent one. At least not universally.
We have sections of our society that may still hold it dear in their own
recollections of it during the liberation struggle. Others still who consider
it within the context of the first decade of independence with feelings of
exclusion. And those who at the turn of
the first independence decade largely frame it within the context of economic failure.
Moreso in
the present day where the latter perceptions of pessimistic perceptions affect
organic national consciousness. And I
will return to the issue of organic national consciousness toward the end of
this brief write up.
As is
historically appreciated, at the occurrence of our national independence ‘national
consciousness’ was popularly collective.
Both by way of struggle and life experiences. Almost every adult Zimbabwean was
clear on the reality of the necessity of national independence and its long
term collective goals.
This became
somewhat ethnically charged with the tragic occurrence of Gukurahundi which was eventually temporarily calmed
with the signing of the Unity Accord between our then two main former
liberation movements, PF Zapu and Zanu Pf. A development that surprisingly remains
underplayed in the contemporary.
What was
clear in the first decade of independence was the fact of former liberation
movements actively leading the narrative on what would be considered
progressive national consciousness. In
this, regrettably they failed even before the end of the decade that was the
1980s. Their one party state endeavor floundered
at the hands of not only the trade and student unions but more significantly because
the Zimbabwean population had no particular interest in it.
And this lack
of public interest was based on downturns in the national economy after the
introduction of the IMF and World Bank inspired Economic Structural Adjustment
Programme (ESAP). With the latter it
became clear to the Zimbabwean public that there was an ‘us’ versus the ‘political
elite’ situation in the country. Hence
there were so many hit protest songs during the 1990s. From Thomas Mapfumo’s ‘Mamvemve’ and also Leonard
Zhakata’s “Mugove” and many other songs that came to reflect a shift away from
a collective understanding of what can be a progressive national consciousness.
Or by the
time the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) escalated questions of what can be the newer
national consciousness through its performance legitimacy questions beyond the
combined ruling Zanu Pf party’s nationalist ethos. And going one further by founding a working peoples
party in the form of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) with the
deliberate intention of changing the discourse on national being and national consciousness
from focusing solely on liberation but also national economic wellbeing.
Initially for the collective national good.
What has happened
in the interceding years after the turn of the first decade of the millennium has
been completely astounding. Based on
both the expansion of economic globalization and austerity or Fanonian desires
for recognition by the Global North. And as fundamentally personally experienced.
And this is
the key point to consider that Zimbabwe’s contemporary national consciousness
is now derived as a result of the foregoing on the basis of what it is that we
have individually experienced. Whether as we grew up or fell from material
favour. We have a very angry national consciousness
and sentiment. And as with such emotive
perceptions of who we may think we are, this emotion is generally easy to take
advantage of. Or to hold onto.
If you lost
an urban shelter during Operation Murambatsvina or were a victim of politically
motivated violence and survived, it is least likely you will ever forget about
it. Let alone change your mind about the ruling party.
Or if you
suffered the end effects of the 2008 inflation while growing up and are now an
adult it is within your memory to refuse to accept those that you have been told
all along caused it.
Even after
the 2017 coup-not-a-coup, assumptions individual Zimbabweans may have had of
what change meant forgot that national consciousness essentially is always
collective and not individual.
In our contemporary
context it is now clearly individualistic and not collective. Even as we seek the comfort and acceptance of
those that appear to be more collectively conscious than we could ever wish for
in the global north. To the extent that they create fortresses around their
continents and generally have no qualms about deportations and setting up
asylum bases on our own African continent.
What I have
however learnt is that we need to regain a more organic sense of national consciousness
that cuts across generations of Zimbabweans.
We cannot wish away our own history as at the same time we cannot forget
our own lived realities. But even our personal life experiences should never
defeat the collective well-being of our society. After all, geographically, politically,
economically and generationally, it is one country.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Wednesday, 6 July 2022
The Trouble With Local Government in Zimbabwe
By Takura Zhangazha*
The architecture
and administration of local government (also referred to as
city/town/municipal/ rural district councils) is very interesting in Zimbabwe. From
varying perspectives. These are namely
historical (also colonial and therefore psycho-social), economic, legal and
political/electoral.
Historical
or colonial because local government finds its contemporary structure still being
informed by the intentions of the Rhodesian settler state. Psycho-social in how
our attitudes toward this remain embedded in a preference of the city/town or
what we generically refer to as the urban economy and life(style). Or what we naively
referred to in high school geography or history lessons as the ‘bright lights
syndrome’. Almost as Fanon would have
predicted. Even if we arrived at it in the now by way of racist and therefore
discriminatory policies. And how this
continuing contemporary attitude is also predicated on mimicry of a then racist
political economy.
This latter
point can be expanded by understanding that the ‘urban’ in Africa tends to be
regarded as the epitome of material and
political success. And the city is
globally perceived as the most efficient form of human settlement. Hence the tragic challenges we have of young Africans’
migration to what appear to be the best of them in the global north at the risk
of life and limb. Zimbabwe is not an
exception. Hence we are turning some of
our peri-urban areas into mini-towns and cities. Or what we considered ‘growth points’ having haphazard
residential urban plans that are unsustainable.
In the contemporary
therefore we have not fundamentally changed what we have considered ‘local
government’. It regrettably has a heavy colonial
hangover as informed by the principles of the protection of the private property
of the privileged and the retention of an exploitative ability to retain the physical
labour of the materially dispossessed.
Both in the past and in the present.
In the third
instance the legal differences in our local government systems are as cyclical
as they are real. The legal dichotomies
between the urban and the rural are now well documented and argued academically. With again the greater literature around this
deferring/ more focused onto the city and not the village. As it relates to property rights, tradition,
culture and assumptions of individual or collective senses of belonging. This even after the Fast Track Land Reform Programme
(FTLRP) where the rural even after expanding into former commercial (urbanized)
land, remains on the periphery and at the interface between what is considered
tradition and modernization. With the
current government intent on reinventing the rural into industrial and private
hubs for mines and large scale commodity agriculture. A development which again closely links to
the economic paradigm of local government in which the priority remains the unequal urban as of old.
Strictly
spoken for this is how capitalism developed and becomes cemented. It values its most key element, the right to
private property in tandem with various forms of nationalism and assumptions of
belonging to a geographical territory by elites in charge of what they consider
lesser mortals.
And this is
where the contemporary politics of our local government system comes in. We know that there are political strongholds
of two main political parties that are based on who controls cities, towns and/or
rural district councils. This has been
the case since 2000. With the opposition
in its still many formats controlling a majority of the major cities, some
towns. While the ruling party in turn in
charge of the rural district councils and a sprinkling of towns.
What is lost
in these political contestations is the fact that our local government system structurally remains the same. In most cases for political reasons such as a
deliberate lack of the political will.
And I will give a quick example here. We are still designing our urban
and rural development programmes based not only on pre-independence masterplans
that exacerbate inequality and difference based on class or physical location.
Even after the FTLRP. And while many of
our elites either side of the political divide think this is what works, the
irony of it is lost to again our inability to reinvent a democratic form of local
government beyond electoral results and populism.
While some
may argue that this is work in progress because there are new processes around
devolution, it is how we re-imagine local government that is more challenging. Devolution
is essentially playing catch up to the urban and its specific lifestyles. Particularly
for political expediency and as a result default development projects that may
not be as sustainable as they appear without the politicians that are pushing
for it. But again, by default it helps stabilize
migratory patterns even though it would increasingly appear we are in an age in
which the rural is dying and on the verge of privatization. Its only saving fact for now is that it
remains the strongest support base for the ruling party in Zimbabwe.
Let me conclude
by a brief argumentation recap. Our
local government system is not working democratically or with a functional
interest in equitable development between the urban and the rural. This is due to the factors cited above, namely,
history (colonial legacies) that incorporate the legal and the economic aspects. But also because of the political
contestations as they relate to elections.
It needs to be re-imagined beyond land barons, matchbox houses and the
newfound intentions of government hand in glove with local and global private capital.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Thursday, 30 June 2022
Zimbabwe Mainstream Media, Journalism in Context and in Trouble.
By Takura Zhangazha*
Zimbabwe’s
media sector has not been in a good situation for a long while. And I am not just referring to the country’s consistently
precarious freedom of expression context. The challenges it faces are
fundamentally about professionalism and sustainability. Two elements that are symbiotic in keeping it
viably afloat. These can also be contradictory
because either can cancel out the other.
That is to say, the sustainability of the media in Zimbabwe can be considered
to be more reliant on its own unethical conduct in order to garner more
readers, viewers, listeners based on preferential journalism. The latter being journalism that is biased,
non-factual and in keeping with what its authors deem to be what a paying public
prefers.
It sort of
fits into what I consider the rather awkward adage of ‘news is what sells’. Particularly for mainstream print and
broadcast media globally and in Zimbabwe.
The particular
uniqueness of Zimbabwe’s media situation is as interesting as it is now worrying. In at least five respects. Namely, ideological
preferences, political bias, the profit motive, caution about crossing
government’s media policies and the interface between old and new tech
motivated media platforms.
I will address
each of these elements separately in this brief write up.
But it also
remains important to mention from the get-go that Zimbabwean journalists are also
caught up in this conundrum as it affects their own welfare and/or unionism. Even where and when they seek to be as
professional and ethical as possible, they are beholden to these aspects I have
mentioned above and will explain below.
To initially
understand Zimbabwean media’s current situation requires understanding its
ideological positioning. Before we even talk of assumptions and realities of
political bias. Our mainstream media is
cut from a very similar ideological cloth.
It is essentially, in the contemporary, a liberal media ideologically. This is largely by way of the legacy of
colonialism and our media training institutions. Particularly where and when it
covers issues relating to the national political economy and private capital.
Even where we try and consider its ideological approach in the first ten years
of national independence, it remained enamored to a relatively liberal
understanding of Zimbabwean realities.
I know that
this is a disputable point but our media and our journalism were generally
designed in the framework of colonial legacy journalism. Hence by the time the Nigerian
government bought, on our behalf, Argus Publications (now Zimpapers) the
tradition of what journalism can be had already been ‘liberally’ set. Despite
our attempts at socialism.
Structurally
however Zimbabwe’s media was designed to be pro-capital as a legacy of Rhodesian
settler colonial hegemony. Both in its
state owned or private forms. Hence even with the then Information and Media
Panel of Inquiry (IMPI) one of its primary recommendations was that of considering
the ‘media as a business’. We may never
have gotten out of that mindset, hence our current mainstream media reflects
more the views of political and private capital powers that obtain. It is not valued as much as a purveyor of
freedom of expression in the public interest than it would be considered for
its representation of elitist interests.
This brings
me to the second element of ‘political partisanship’ in our contemporary mainstream
media. As highlighted earlier this
partisanship or bias in our media is linked to elements of its
sustainability. Taking specific sides is
not as ideological or as value driven as it would be in say for example the
global north’s media. Here it is almost
as though bias and a lack of media ethics is what leads to a sustainable mainstream
media based on target audiences which include those in power or those in opposition
politics and their supporters.
And even
more significantly those that create advertising or other revenue for the
mainstream media. Such a situation enables journalism that is unprofessional as
it relates to what is required for the mainstream media outlet to either make
money or be accepted as credible in the eyes of its target audience. We can argue that this is typical of all
media but in our Zimbabwean context its exaggeration is that it is considered
the norm and not the exception.
The third element
is that of the assumption of the profit motive of the media. It tallies closely with the discussion on the
matter of political bias. Media owners
are largely responsible for putting pressure on senior level journalists
(editors in particular) to function like chief executive officers. At the expense of their journalistic roles. And all at the same time thinking that
journalism in and of itself can only be successful if it ratchets up sales via
increased eyes and ears. In this sense, the ‘media as a business’ model falls
short of expanding free expression and public interest access to information. This approach commodifies not only journalism
but also free expression. Though the
media owners have limited interest in this as they crunch dwindling profit
numbers.
The fourth element
is that of how the mainstream media remains wary of our national government’s
media laws. And how they curtail free
and independent journalism. While these
laws have been undergoing reforms that have been cautiously welcomed by
stakeholders, the government’s approach to media freedom has also led to skepticism,
anger and mistrust. It has also had the
end effect of creating a very public perception that the private media is
always correct when reporting on government transgressions. Especially because
of the continued arrest and harassment of journalists that are either just doing
their jobs or perceived as being pro-opposition.
Finally,
mainstream media has a dilemma with social media because of the disruption of its
long obtaining ‘news cycle’. To the
extent that no one can really say which leads the other at the moment. From social media influencers through to
bloggers/vloggers the mainstream media I Zimbabwe appears to be playing
catch-up most of the times. It is a development that has opened up the journalism
profession to that perennial question, “Who or what is a journalist?”
In essence
however this question is really about how does the Zimbabwean public value
journalism. Both in its more traditional
or newer formats. I do not think the profession is as valued anymore largely
due to the fact of technology enabling almost anyone with mobile telephony and
access to social media the capacity to tell their own version of a news
event. But more significantly because
freedom of expression is now highly individualized in tandem with its individualization.
I do not
know if Zimbabwean journalism is in need of a rescue. Only practicing journalists
and media owners, organisations can respond to this matter. What I do know is that it is in trouble and
that as elsewhere globally, it is losing ground on the public interest value of
free expression as a fundamental democratic right.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Saturday, 25 June 2022
Questioning the Commodification of Free Expression in Zimbabwe
By Takura Zhangazha*
There are
many issues about our general and specific political conversations that require
flagging out in Zimbabwe. Not only as
they relate to our hard held opinions but more significantly our political consciousness. While this may appear to be abstract, we probably
need to understand the necessity of getting ourselves as Zimbabweans to be a
bit more frank with each other. Particularly
about what we consider to be progressive politics and its full import on our
society.
I am going
to make an attempt at this.
In the
first place what I have noticed is that there is indeed a political economy to
our opinions or our right to freely express ourselves. The foundation of this
is our long drawn historical assumptions of what it means to be successful in
life. Both by way of education and materialist
accomplishments. Key questions that Zimbabwean
society asks of us, including the Church, are how educated are you? What degrees do you have (including if you
have a PhD), what car do you drive, do you have urban property (stand), and
where do you work?
This is a
general global trend in capitalist/neoliberal societies. We may not quite be such a society in the
strict sense of the term our national mindsets appear set on it. Especially based on our desires for departure
to the global north. An issue I will come back to later.
What has
been more interesting is the fact of the carry over habits of assumptions of
what it means to be successful in Zimbabwe.
It’s a very complex argument but the general impression is a given with
how we relate to each other at work, in churches, families, schools, rural
associations and also political parties.
So when we
express our political or even other opinions we are, by default, mindful of
this political and economic framework of consciousness. We quite literally reflect it more than it
does our own perception of who we are and who we can be. Beyond ourselves and as we pass it on to our
children.
Our
opinions appear to have become rigid beliefs.
Especially where they concern politics.
It is as expected but it also has specific queries that would accompany
understanding our realities.
Almost as
though if someone says in your face that ‘Jesus Saves’, you should be allowed
to ask a question as to. How does he save?” And proceed as you consciously desire. But this is not the case in contemporary
Zimbabwe.
We have
been made by many to believe that free expression is dogmatic and
partisan. That even our mainstream media
can only be found on one side or the other of our political divide and
therefore are only worth listening/reading to where and when they reconfirm our
own perceptions for what we may already have decided we should think.
The title
of this blog is however more interesting. The political economy of free
expression in Zimbabwe reflects the fact of the material and political desires that
a majority of us have. Both in the urban and rural areas. That is, to own a car, house and to send our
children to the best private schools/ universities. In order to again reap the material wealth of
our efforts. From the children.
The only
catch with this is that we assume we are now in control of our opinions via
social media. Yet is generally
established that the latter pushes us in specific directions about how we
should think about ourselves and our opinions.
It reconfirms, in general, an assumption that our individual opinions
matter. Collectively. And therefore
because of the combination of the individual opinions in to a numerical
collective we are therefore correct in the same said opinion. Even though we do not own any of the social
media platforms that we belong to. They
are owned by individuals who determine, via algorithms what can be shared and
posted on them. This includes our angst at local mobile telephony and internet service
providers when their services break down,
So the political
economy of free expression in Zimbabwe is probably three fold. It begins with the actual political economy which
is neoliberal (an assumption that the free market will solve all of our
problems). And it is then followed by a
desire for individual recognition for your opinion as it fits the latter narrative
and sadly a simultaneous recognition from the global north. Not only for our
social media influencers but also for our mainstream media. Thirdly, it combines the ideological with
the emotional. Your feelings are reconfirmed with your desires. What you
believe, even without facts, is what obtains. And it is what you go with. The only key difference is that at the moment
in Zimbabwe, there is no drastic motivation to act on it.
This has
been a relatively complicated blog. What appears to be real is that free
expression is increasingly becoming a commodity in Zimbabwe. Both by way of who owns the platforms you
use to express yourself and the ideological parameters you chose to do so.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Tuesday, 7 June 2022
A Changing Pan Africanism: A Need to Return to the Source.
By Takura Zhangazha*
The current
chairperson of the African Union (AU) and president of Senegal, Macky Sall
recently met with Russian president Vladimir Putin in the former capacity. In representing the African continent, not
much was reported on the geo-political implications of such a meeting save for
stories claiming that agricultural products that Africa heavily relies on from
Ukraine and Russia are still able to reach our African shores. For any discerning mind there was probably
more to the meeting than what was reported.
Hence on social media there were memes on how close Sall was to Putin as
compared to for example the president of France, Emmanuel Macron. A meme in which one can assume a deliberate
ploy by Putin to demonstrate that at this time of the Russia- Ukraine war he
intended to demonstrate greater Russian proximity to Africa in international relations. Not only based on the number of United
Nations (UN) votes from African countries (Zimbabwe included) that refused to
suspend Russia from the UN Human Rights
Council (UNHRC)
Be that as
it may, Africa’s response to the Russia-Ukraine conflict has been interesting
to observe and reminiscent of a Pan Africanism of yesteryear to reflect
upon.
And it is
an historical given that a majority of African states were closer to Russia
during their anti-colonial struggle than they were to what we then referred to
as the global West. While mired in the
global politics of the Cold War, a majority of African countries in all of its
regions (East, North, West and Southern) did have greater solidarity with the
then Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Even until the latter collapsed in 1989.
But before
that as far back as the 1960s, the inimitable Ghanaian and African hero Kwame
Nkrumah had sort of set the framework for Africa’s interaction with the rest of
the world with his now famous dictum, and I am paraphrasing here, “We face neither
east or west. But we face forward.” This was in relation to the fact that Africa
would undertake a Pan Africanism that related to its intention to play an even
hand with global superpowers in its particular interests. Especially where it concerned the outstanding
task of liberation from colonialism but also the economic development of
already independent states on the continent.
We also had
a phase post the Cold War and its global international residues that our
post-apartheid era African leaders decided that it would be important to rename
and reframe the then Organization of African Unity (OAU) to the AU which
obtains today. The main thinking was
that we were almost done with the primary purpose of the OAU barring the
Saharawi Republic of the liberation f the African continent from
colonialism.
We moulded
the AU along the lines of the European Union (EU) yet the two organisation’s
geneses are historically incompatible.
The former having been formed for liberation, the latter for primarily
expanding economic cooperation between European states and eventually
coagulating that into liberalism beyond economics.
I remember
the big academic and continental debates about what we then referred to as the
African Renaissance with a new crop of intellectual leaders. These included for example the still
inimitable Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, the long duree Olusegun Obasanjo, the
now late Abdel Aziz Bouteflika and the one who eventually hosted the AU
monument in Senegal, Abdoulaye Wade.
The thing
we did not to fully comprehend at that time and probably now is that taking
charge of what we would call our own destiny as Africans is as historical as it
is grounded in catching up with the rest of the world. A process which is historically ongoing as opposed
to being considered in phases as we did when we formed the African Union. Noble
as it was. And I do not make this point
lightly.
Where the
AU is now setting us on course for Agenda 2063 and insisting for example on
what it calls a ‘youth dividend’ in terms of our continental demographic, we
are saddled with the sad reality that this is no longer our own organic Pan
African narrative. We regrettably may be
returning to being slaves of a ‘free’ market that commodifies us again.
We need to
insist we are not a market for global neoliberalism. Neither should our Pan Africanism, or what
remains of it gladly be open sesame to the dictates of global capital.
Where we
return to the origins of our initial Pan Africanism ideologically and in
relation to the Cabralist aspirations of our people, we become a better
continent. Based on our Pan African liberatory history and an understanding of
the promise of the future.
But back to
the meeting between Sall and Putin.
Whatever motivated it and how Africa places or argues for itself within
the ambit of this increasingly globalized conflict and its potentially devastating
impact, we need to revive our organic Pan Africanism. As taught by Nkrumah, Nyerere, Cabral, Fanon,
Mbeki and others. There has never been a
better time to remember those famous words of Nkrumah, “Africa Must Unite!”
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
.