In October 2017, just six months ago, Mr. Mugabe was the State President and it looked as if we were stuck with him for another 5-year term after elections in 2018. There seemed to be no possibility of real change. When I drove from my home in Bulawayo to Harare for my duties in Parliament I would have to face 18 to 21 Police manned road blocks. We never knew what demands would confront us at these forms of Police suppression and extortion.
Our economy was deeply mired in the mud of investor skepticism and doubt, our money was shrinking while we watched, the stock market was rising like a meteor as people tried to protect their liquid assets by investing in shares. The premium on fungible assets rose to record levels. The flight of people seeking better lives was increasing and our neighbors were becoming increasingly anxious.
The change agenda seemed remote, the main advocate of democracy and reforms in State affairs, Morgan Tsvangirai was fighting cancer in South Africa.
Then the President pulled the trigger on his own demise, he fired Mnangagwa. The crocodile sank out of sight - not out of fear but to prepare his attack. A friend of mine, sitting on the bank of the Chobe watched a herd of goat's drink on the opposite bank. As they turned to climb the bank, there was a splash and faster than the eye could follow a crocodile came out of the water and took a large goat who had just turned away from the water. In seconds the surface of the water was again smooth and quiet.
When it came, the attack by Mnangagwa was seamless, carried in the way we have come to expect of him, no detail was left out and I remarked to a colleague in the MDC - 'now the country knows what it feels like to confront ED on the playing field!' - a reference to the 2013 elections when a campaign run by ED simply rolled over the MDC and they terminated the GNU.
It did not stop there; the ED team took over a couple of floors of a 5-star hotel in the Capital and their transition team took over from the Military who simply went back to their barracks. In a week a new Cabinet was formed and when they walked into their first Cabinet meeting on a Tuesday morning, each Minister was given a 100-day program that they were expected to complete. The new regime hit the ground running and a flurry of activity ensued.