Can Or Will Africa Trust Tsvangirai?
10 January 2017
Spread the love

MDC-T leader, Morgan Tsvangirai is reported to be courting African leaders to explain the situation in Zimbabwe and we hope he has finally seen the light and this will be the beginning of engagements between his party and leaders on the continent.

An enduring criticism of Tsvangirai is that he is a Western puppet — whether true or false — and he has not helped changing this image either, as he is seen as constantly hobnobbing with the West, but with a seeming disdain for African leaders.

While support and relations with the West are important, networking with African leaders could be more beneficial for the local opposition, as they seek to dump the puppet tag.

Even African leaders have somehow shown contempt for Tsvangirai, as the opposition have — by commission or omission — allowed President Robert Mugabe to characterise them as such when he meets other heads of State and government on the continent.

Mugabe’s mantra, whether ingenious or disingenuous, has been to claim that Africa is under neo-imperial attack, with Tsvangirai being a Trojan Horse.

The message is that if Tsvangirai were to take over in Zimbabwe, regime change would spread across Southern Africa and ultimately the whole continent.

By engaging African leaders, whom he has criticised in the past, Tsvangirai can explain his party’s position and illustrate that the issue in Zimbabwe is not neo-colonialism, but economic decay brought about by poor leadership.

In discussions with African leaders, Tsvangirai has to accept that he is coming from a position of weakness built by years of mistrust and scepticism and a hint of paranoia, but this should not in any way frustrate him, as this could prove a masterstroke when electoral disputes arise, as they are bound to.

In the past, African leaders, except a handful, have been quick to endorse Zimbabwe’s evidently flawed electoral process, not because they believe they are free or fair, but rather, they seem to have faith in Mugabe rather than Tsvangirai.

As the adage says; better the devil you know. They know Mugabe’s excesses, but they feel he is better than Tsvangirai, not because of something the MDC-T leader did, but because the lines of communication between them and the Zimbabwean opposition are all but non-existent.

Tsvangirai needs to impress on the African leaders that democracy in Zimbabwe is non-existent, freedoms of speech and association are regularly trampled upon, while the economy and social services have tanked.

He should show that were he to be in power, he would create better relationships on the region and the continent, while improving social services and the economy, which would reduce the need for Zimbabweans to flood other countries, where some strain social services out there.

Tsvangirai should show that he comes as a friend and can be trusted to lead an African country without necessarily delivering it to the West. – Newsday

0 Replies to “Can Or Will Africa Trust Tsvangirai?”

  1. Zimbabwe has become the basket case of an otherwise wealthy African country gone to the dogs because of corrupt and incompetent leaders. There is no way Mugabe could ever sell himself as a great statesman given the sorry state of Zimbabwe under his rule the fact that he has done just that goes to show just how inapt Tsvangirai is. The tyrant has done a great job of shooting himself in the foot and Tsvangirai is so incompetent he is the one who is made to look the fool!

    Tsvangirai shot himself in the foot by failing to get even one reform implemented during the GNU even after SADC leaders did their best to remind him to do so. Correction, he shot himself in the head because politically he is finished. Tsvangirai can spend the next month, year or decade visiting every African country he can think of that will not change the fact that he is corrupt and incompetent.

    Tsvangirai will never ever deliver the democratic changes the nation is dying for, the sooner the people of Zimbabwe accept this reality they soon we can get on with the important task of search for a competent leader!