MUGABE OUT: Evan Mawarire’s Second Act
5 February 2017
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Simon Allison | I spent most of Thursday wandering in circles around the Harare Magistrates’ Court, aptly-named Rotten Row, waiting for police to bring Evan Mawarire to court. He never came.

After arresting him at the airport on his return to Zimbabwe on Wednesday, the police are taking full advantage of the 48 hours they can legally detain him without charge.

In July last year, I spent another Thursday doing much the same thing. But that day was very different. For one thing, Mawarire actually arrived, and was eventually acquitted, on a technicality, of all the charges against him. For another, I was surrounded by thousands of ordinary Zimbabweans who had come to show their solidarity with the inspirational, subversive pastor. More than anything else, it was their presence — a popular protest unprecedented in Zimbabwe’s recent history — that forced the government to let him go. It was that, or a riot.
Six months later, Mawarire’s citizen army were not out in force. There were a handful of close friends and associates present on Thursday, but nothing like the massive outpouring of support that shook the Zimbabwean regime so badly in July. After lunch, even the riot police gave up, concluding that their presence was no longer required.

There are some obvious, practical reasons for this. Mawarire himself opted for a low-key arrival, saying he did not want a “hero’s welcome”. Security precautions meant that very few people knew of his plans to return, which in turn means that no one has been organising and planning for the likelihood of his arrest. And security around the court itself has been tightened, with new fencing making it harder to get in and out.

But there is also a deeper malaise. Speaking to activists and civil society leaders, it is clear that Mawarire’s star has fallen dramatically in the six months that he has been away — and no one is quite sure what to do with him now that he is back.

This is, partly, a natural reaction: last year, from nowhere, Mawarire suddenly became the focus of national and international attention, eclipsing veteran activists who have fought longer and sacrificed more than he has. “There’s a lot of jealousy in these circles,” one activist confided in me.

There is also a legitimate fear that Mawarire is a destabilising influence; that his presence, and the possibility of him running for public office, could derail the delicate coalition negotiations that are currently happening between the major opposition parties. Because his return to Zimbabwe was shrouded in such secrecy, no one really knows what he intends to do, or how it will affect them. He is a wild card.

Mostly, however, the resentment towards Mawarire stems from a sense of bitter disappointment at his decision to leave Zimbabwe just days after his release from prison in July. Few of his supporters saw this coming, and many felt betrayed and angry, because in leaving, Mawarire immediately squandered the considerable political momentum that had been built up around him.
There is a sense — perhaps over-optimistic — that if he had stayed, the country would now be considerably closer to the kind of change that Mawarire preaches.

It didn’t help that while Mawarire and his family were safely in the United States, the regime intensified its crackdown on all forms of opposition, with record levels of assault, abduction and torture reported. While Mawarire was being feted in America, and showered with accolades, his comrades at home were suffering.

These criticisms are understandable, even if not always justified. After all, Mawarire had every reason to fear for his life, and in public statements has scrupulously declined to take individual credit for the movement that his #ThisFlag videos kick-started.

Despite the tensions, Mawarire remains a popular, influential figure, and he has plenty of people fighting on his behalf in the courts, in the backrooms of power, and on social media. But it is clear that his first objective on home soil — even while in detention — must be to win back the full support of Zimbabwe’s tightly-knit activist and opposition community.

It shouldn’t be hard. In returning to Zimbabwe, fully cognisant of the risks entailed, Mawarire has surely proved his commitment to the cause — and his willingness to sacrifice for it. And from a pragmatic perspective, the opposition movement needs him, even if he remains politically naive. With the exception of veteran leader Morgan Tsvangirai, there are few politicians or activists in Zimbabwe who can match his combination of name recognition and charisma.

In leaving Zimbabwe, Mawarire may have taken the wind out of the sails of the burgeoning resistance movement. But his return, and his immediate arrest, offers a chance to regain some of that lost momentum, building on the extraordinary commitment displayed by Mawarire’s comrades in his absence. With elections coming up in 2018, it is a chance that surely must be taken.

This article first appeared in the Daily Maverick

0 Replies to “MUGABE OUT: Evan Mawarire’s Second Act”

  1. The struggle should never have to depend on one individual, this is how dictators are created!

  2. The only people who will have cause to fear “wild card” Mawarire are those who are fearful of democracy and free and fair elections. If Mawarire was to join those now calling for the boycott of flawed and illegal elections everyone knows will be rigged by Zanu PF that will throw the cat amongst the pigeons in the opposition camp who have already said they will contest regardless.

    Zanu PF has resisted the implementation of reforms because the party knows that it will never win free, fair and credible elections. Forcing the opposition to boycott the elections and force Zanu PF to implement the reforms will be exploding the time-bomb in Zanu PF’s faces! The dictatorship will be finished!

  3. Those people who are disappointed Pastor Mawarire “deserted the struggle” have the wrong end of the stick. The national struggle should not depend on one, two or even a few hundred individuals but depend on all of us – all 14 million Zimbabweans wherever we happen to be in the world! When Mawarire left there should have been thousands of others to takeover and carry on!

    It is easy to see why Mugabe has found creating a one-man dictatorship a piece of cake. We love putting our leaders on pedestals so they are so powerful everything is in their hands.

    A healthy and functional democracy demands that we hold those in leadership position to account. How can we hope to do that when we have made them demigods already!

  4. Mawarire and Tsvangirai must work together. Tsvangirsi should not be judgementAl otherwise hatizoziva xvaanoda if he can’t eork with popular Mawarire

  5. Why should we trust someone who disappointed the whole nation when we were in the struggle mood everyone united from Matebeleland to Ndauland via Karangaland. This Mawarire pastor is just someone else who is doesn’t need our trust. People knows very well that he has been arrested but a lot are not willing to join him.
    Tsvangrison although has weaknesses, he never ran away from his people during struggle. With the support which Mawarire had, I think by today we going to talk about the real Moses. War veterans were also behind him army and the general police were behind him but all of a sudden he vanished.