Mugabe had to go for any progress to occur; nothing can take away the unspeakable joy at Mugabe’s departure. Zimbabwe had no future under the rule of Mugabe. There was nothing meaningful that he could promise Zimbabweans that he had failed to do in his 37 years of misrule. It remains odd how some were quick to attack the role of the army in the intervention. One would honestly wonder whether these “analysts” would have wanted a continuation of Mugabe’s tyrannical rule, it really stretches common sense.
Aside from this matter, Mugabe’s exit has shown a very unfortunate, but evident dark characteristic in some Zimbabweans. One thing that emerges from Mugabe’s exit is that this country is full of people who lack principles, people who are only loyal to power and nothing else. These people are near-mercenaries, they have no principles of their own and, like a dog they will wag their tails in pursuance of anyone holding a bone.
We have seen people who had denigrated Zanu PF and vowed never to return to it stampeding to deify the new party president. I have always stated that the fact of bootlicking is the first indicator of insincere schemers. People who are principled have no reason to bootlick. It is playing out clearly that some in Zanu PF learnt nothing from Mugabe’s last days in office.
The very culture of gate-keeping a national leader and personalizing governance had brought the country to its knees and one wonders why these sycophants can’t see this having lived in the cold themselves in the last three years.
There were some even in workplaces who threatened fellow workers because of their ties to “former First Lady Grace Mugabe”. Some, taking advantage of the system, would emblazon their vehicles with Grace’s face and not even the dreaded extortionate police would dare touch them.
Social media users will also remember foul-mouthed and controversial businessman Wicknell Chivayo who, around the time Mnangagwa was fired, posted a picture of a worn-out Lacoste label shoe in obvious reference to the sacking of the incumbent Mnangagwa. Just like fellow mogul Chiyangwa, the man was at pains trying to appear a Lacoste supporter after the military intervention.
It is almost comic to hear Chiyangwa trying hard to distance himself from his family friend, former Higher and Tertiary Education minister Jonathan Moyo. It was funny to see a man who had enjoyed the privileges from the rumour of being Mugabe’s nephew for years trying hard to dissociate himself from the people whose honors he had immensely benefited from.
It is to Mnangagwa’s credit at the congress that he had to restrain the bootlicking that had crept to dizzy heights. Mnangagwa remarked that the praise song he desired was the national anthem and not those songs that idolized him.
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