The Wounded Buffalo Issues a Challenge
Last year I wrote a weekly letter saying that in 2008, Zanu PF was seriously wounded by the MDC. I alluded to them being like a wounded Buffalo, wounded but not fatally and retreating back into the bush to wait for its adversary to try to follow up. I outlined how dangerous this situation was for the MDC as the Buffalo is a very dangerous and devious adversary whose strength is legendary.
I can recall an incident in the lowveld when an old Buffalo bull was seriously injured by a lion and retreated to the safety of a local Ranch house where he felt safe and was allowed to graze and rest with water close by until he recovered.
In a way the wounded Zanu PF is like those two examples - in both scenarios the Buffalo retreats to recover, regain strength then goes back into the fray seeking to confront his tormentor, avoid further injury or even death and in the process inflict real damage to his hunter. Anyone who has hunted the African Buffalo knows exactly what I am talking about. In thick bush or Jesse scrub, a Buffalo lying up in such bush is nearly impossible to see until it's too late.
At the Zanu PF conference last week, they issued a clear challenge to the MDC - they called out, "let's go to an election in March 2013 and resolve the power issue once and for all." I take this as a grunting call by that old Buffalo that we shot 4 years ago. The question for us is how to respond? We are young - much younger than that old Bull in the bush and quite confident of our ability to come out of any final confrontation with his head on our trophy wall. But we are not dumb!
Anyone who rushes in and tries to take out a wounded Buffalo on his terms is inviting disaster. They have had four years to prepare the ground and make their plans for how to deal with us in the MDC. Zanu PF is physically much stronger than ourselves and we can only lose any confrontation that simply involves physical strength. We have a weapon and under the right conditions we can deal with that old animal without any risk to ourselves, but we need therefore to entice the animal out of his cover, into the open where he can be dealt with.