We can all dream
It is now 30 days to 'D' Day - the day of democracy, when we all go to a polling station and at the cost of about $50 each (the cost of an election in Zimbabwe) we are asked to appoint our next batch of 2 500 leaders. We start with the President, then our local representative in the House of Assembly, then our Councilor on the local Authority. This is serious business, we have to evaluate each candidate and make a choice.
They are all important to us individually and collectively - the President because he is the Captain of the ship and gives us direction and control over the crew. The Members of Parliament because they oversee the Captain and his Executive Officers, the Local Authority because they control the basic services that make our daily lives bearable - transport, roads, health, education, water, sanitation, waste collection, housing - this list goes on and on.
They are all important and deserve close attention. Our vote matters - everyone and each of us has the same say - millionaires and paupers, male and female, black white, pink and brown. It will be a public holiday and I think we should all go out and party - its 'our day' in the sun - make it count!!
In my next four letters I am going to dream about the day after the election and what might be possible. It is a long time since we were able to dream of what things could be - during the dying days of the Smith regime, I thought they would never get together and settle our differences, I thought that they would fight on and destroy the country completely - in fact I knew that Mr. Mugabe and Mr. Smith wanted to fight to the finish - both thought they could win - I knew it was a zero sum game for all of us. We were rescued from our own stupidity by the international Community working together and a brilliant American Secretary of State who knew what had to be done and had the power to do the job.
In November last year, the Army stepped into the ring and in a brilliant and swift action, and without firing a shot, forced a 93-year-old who was long past his sell by date, to go into retirement with dignity and replaced him with a leadership that is now trying to put things right. It a way it parallels what the Red Army did in China when Mau died - they stepped into the ring, maintained stability and installed leadership that they thought might usher in a new day for China - they were right and look at the result.