A case of obdurate generals
It is a no brainer that the very same conditions that the Patriotic Front desired for democratic, free and fair elections in 1980, are the very same conditions we desire today.
"By what faith can an election be regarded as democratic, free and impartial if it is surrounded at its four corners by Smith's policemen, his soldier, his district commissioner and his judge? Thus asked the white paper drafted by the then co-leaders of the Patriotic Front, Robert Mugabe and Jason Moyo, in 1977 during attempts to find a lasting solution to majority rule in Zimbabwe.
By what faith, therefore, can the 2013 elections be considered democratic, free and fair if they are surrounded at all four corners by Mugabe's men in the army, in the police, the electoral commission and the registrar general's office?
History is amazing isn't it? Reading the book "The struggle for Zimbabwe", something which I always do, continually leaves me with a new perspective on our current reality. I continue to be intrigued at how the tides of change repeat themselves over and over and yet, we never seem to learn from them. Significant similarities always jump out from our past, especially now as we move towards change.
Ian Smith was as obdurate as some our generals are now, when it came to security issues and who would control the army and the police during the transition period. He did all he could to delay the matter, kept moving goal posts, lied and connived to delay the inevitable. Funny enough, I see the same desperation in ZANU (PF) as it dawns on them that change is coming whether they like it or not. The danger of not accepting it now is that one can be swept away when it comes as happened to "good old Smithy".