On MDC-T and Operation Restore Mnangagwa Legacy
6 December 2017
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PART1  – 

By Daphne Magidi| I remember when General Chiwenga addressed the nation and that evening I made a post arguing that a lot of people did not understand the Generals’ Speech. Surely they didn’t, even up to today they still haven’t and unfortunately the majority of those people are in opposition not forgetting some within Zanu-Pf.

 

The only people who could have grasped the agenda of the speech were people such as myself who are not aligned to party politics. I remember debating and advising my friends from the opposition MDC as they kept telling me I was wrong I was the one who did not understand the speech. There were three things I plucked out instantly now – that a coup was imminent. The reasons would be the following  –

  1. To Restore the legacy of Zanu pf by protecting the revolution
  2. Assertion that Zimbabwe was not going into the hands of non-Revolutionaries
    3. Only Zanu-Pf will lead Zimbabwe

 

My opposition friends did not condemn any of these statements publicly if I missed this please enlighten me. They simply rejoiced and I could see them on Facebook singing the song “ Dzamutsana mutsana, Tsuro nembwa.”

 

 

N’anga neinobata Amai,”

 

With eyes 👀 as open as mine I told them not to rejoice at ‘N’anga neinobata Amai,” as I knew this would affect them too – if Mugabe is removed by the Generals then what’s left for the MDC to do after that? Wasn’t this their job all along?

But they lashed at me saying I’m an enemy of progress and a Mugabe sympathiser. Like a prophet however I could see the non existent future of the MDC in Zimbabwean politics. As this “Coup that wasn’t a coup“ /Revolution was Operation Restore Zanu PF Legacy.  To be further precise, it was Operation Restore Mnangagwa.

 

Sometimes it’s good to visit history before history revisits you. We went down memory lane to revisit history of Zimbabwe, analyse Zanu pf history and why Mugabe stayed in power that long , who was his power source? I reminded my friends from the MDC of our efforts over the last 20 years to remove Mugabe and who stood between us and him. I remember as a very young girl running across the city centre from the South African embassy when it was along Enterprise road in Eastleigh to my late sister’s house in Highfields at Willowvale flats on foot because Morgan Tsvangirai had led the biggest strike in Zimbabwe’s history and the soldiers were out on the streets with tankers together with the police. That was in 1997.

I flashed back to 2008 (11 years later) when Tsvangirai won and the election violence that followed and the massive rigging, death, rape and torture of a lot of opposition supporters not forgetting Gukurahundi in the 80s.

 

I asked MDC who was behind this violence? I asked them to read Mnangagwa’s letter when he fled to SA, to go back and replay or re-read the Generals’ press conference held a week later. The general Constantino Chiwenga was straight forward in his speech and I noticed lots of Zimbabweans misunderstood it. I even made a post highlighting that. I told opposition to analyse the coup why there is one and for who? Who is behind it? Next after a failed coup attempt, the generals suddenly start negotiating with President Mugabe. You don’t negotiate in that context but of course they did. Who negotiates a take-over?

 

But opposition was waiting in the docks for Zanu pf to remove Zanu pf at their convenience, right they fail Bob lectures the generals the constitution reminds them the power is with the people – That’s when our oppressors remembered it was our revolution which we started years back and they stopped us then in less than 24 hours they have us on the streets and suddenly Mugabe goes.

 

 

Why attack a useless 94 year old and not his immortal system?

 

Barely a few hours later Chinamasa reminds the opposition that the events taking place are Zanu pf eternal politics as the opposition assumed it was a national solidarity march they thought they had lots of power to be involved transitionally. But they should have Hijacked that revolution when I advised them to do so (Zanu pf had placards advertising ED as the new president and they wanted their VP back ) MDC should have marched with all their campaign points but No they just wanted to see Mugabe go.  Why attack a useless 94 year old and not his system which is bound to live forever? With ignorance as per usual of the real events, they simply marched .

Mugabe was not only issue that is where MDC lost it – as opposition they seemed to tell the world they only had a problem with Mugabe not Zanu pf or anyone else in his party. Also they seem to have been lost in translation with the Mugabe must go slogan – He is gone they have nothing else to say, no policies to counter Zanu pf and with ED doing well with international relations and domestic policies there is no vacancy for MDC in Zimbabwe and outside. They are left looking like the old Zanu pf with the same leader for 18 years who is very ill and 3 Vice Presidents. MDC is now everything Zanu pf is running from. So now he is gone they seem to look buried like lost sheep. The people removed Mugabe. Now Zanu pf is making it look like they removed Bob- people see them as heroes now and there is no transitional government, something MT hoped for no wonder why he was passive throughout events so not to disappoint his future employers.

 

Now that you are all conscious – Welcome to Operation Restore Zanu pf Legacy, Welcome to Operation Restore Mnangagwa Legacy. Welcome to Mnangagwe, ooops, Zimbabwe!

 

I wish all opposition politics a speedy recovery. Good day

6 Replies to “On MDC-T and Operation Restore Mnangagwa Legacy”

  1. Agreed Munya. The removal of Mugabe was an event on the critical path, and this milestone was achieved, so why not celebrate. What is Mugabe had remained in power until 2023, who was going to dare to remove him? Now as ZImbabweans we need to decide what to do. In fact those that are saying we celebrated for nothing, what were their options to deal with the mugabe issue? what are their options now to help the economy recover? Even the lady Magidi who started this story, why can’t she offer just 2 options for us to move forward – it is one thing to blame others and its another to proffer solutions. I read her whole article I dont see anything any suggestion, any steps to move forward – u cant just say let us deal with the ZANU PF system and you leave it there. How do we do that? what must I do when I wake up tomorrow? What must u and her and everyone else do change the monster? We need real steps not just to state our wishes. Until we start suggesting real concrete steps to confront ZANU we may as well have faith that ED will do something at least positive. Ndaenda.

  2. Every milestone is to be celebrated, the fall of Mugabe is a milestone for the people of Zimbabwe and the people celebrated. Whether he was removed by his own thugs or died a natural death we the people would have celebrated as we did. To have foresight or short sightedness is neither here nor there. Even a snake bite directed at Mugabe would have been celebrated, so don’t think that all the people who celebrated and marched to get Mugabe out of office are dumb. They had reason to do so. If you didn’t celebrate the fall of the dictator it’s your choice but the majority of the people of Zimbabwe did regardless of who did it. Whatever will happen in the future is a story for another day.

  3. No one has ever suggested that the opposition or the public should have confronted the coup plotters. The beef here is that the public should not have greeted these coup plotters as heroes because they are the ones who, until the coup, had ruthlessly silenced the people to keep Mugabe in power.

    It is the same thugs who had pointed the gun at us the public to force us to vote for Mugabe who were pointing the gun at Mugabe to force him to resign. Just because they were pointing the gun at Mugabe did not change them from being thugs. Our struggle these last 37 years is to end the politics of thuggery and we are not ending it by celebrating it even if it is directed at the biggiest thug of the day.

    Next year Zimbabwe is going into another election, if you think these Zanu PF thugs are going to risk losing power and their right to loot by holding free and fair elections then you are very naive indeed!

  4. Thank you for reminding the people of Zimbabwe we are our own worst enemy because we are short sighted. The dog-eat-dog infighting in Zanu PF was only to our advantage in that whichever faction was left standing it will be weaker than the united party and that should have been the limit to our involvement in the firing of ED and the coup that followed. It was only because we are short sighted that we let ourselves be sucked in and pick sides.

    Having joined the Lacoste victory march on 18 November 2017 it has been impossible to get Mnangagwa to listen to our demands for free and fair elections. Mnangagwa is hope to ride on the wave of public euphoria of the removal of Mugabe to rig next year’s elections. He will have 5 years to consolidate his power base. People will see then that they had been hoodwinked but it will be too late.

    There is no one more blind than one with seeing eyes but refuse to open them because they are happier with the wish than reality. Unfortunately life is governed by reality and not wishful thinking!

  5. What you are saying is true from the Chiwenga speech, it’s true from Chinamasa warning; yes it was ZANU PF internal fight to restore ZANU PF legacy. I personally head it from the general’s address to the nation. What I don’t understand is what did you expect the opposition to have done during the process of an army coup? The army was in control, the president was in house arrest; everyone was not sure what was going on and we were scared the situation could degenerate into a full blast coup. I am an ordinary Zimbabwean, I don’t belong to any political party; but I think given the circumstances in the country at that time, it would have been folly for the opposition to confront heavily armed generals with any kind of demands. Mind you the army is not international relations officers but professionals in killing to defend what they believe in. I knew what it meant to restore legacy; I didn’t care much about what would become of the opposition. All I cared about was/ is the

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