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Jonathan Moyo explains why he dumped Chamisa and is backing ZANU-PF

Chamisa himself has publicly said on numerous occasions that he is politically no longer what or who he was when I supported him between 2018 and 2021. He has repudiated all his pre-CCC affiliations, including his 2018 MDC-A, and the parliamentary and local authority candidates that were elected as MDC-A in 2018.

Is Chamisa the only one who is allowed to change? And is the proposition that when Chamisa changes, everyone else should agree with him and follow him wherever he is going, just because he would be claiming that God is showing him the way?

That kind of Jim Jones scenario is not praxis politics, it is doomsday politics. Chamisa can have his freedom, as his political choice. 

Otherwise, it’s clear that the 2018 Chamisa has changed to the 2023 Chamisa, who now leads an opaque secret society called CCC, which has no ideology besides an oxymoron called strategic ambiguity, with no constitution, no policies, no structures, and no office bearers except four visible individuals: Chamisa himself, Mahere, Ostallos, and Chibaya who is just a runner with no voice.

These are big Chamisa changes from Chamisa 2018.

In the second place, and this is more important than the first place, the open letter of apology to ZanuPF members that I co-wrote with Cde Patrick Zhuwao on 15 November 2022 and posted on this TL fully explains what has changed since 2018, especially from an ideological and praxis points of view.

With our November 2022 open letter to ZanuPF members as the backdrop, my criticism of ZanuPF from November 2017 to circa mid 2021 had a bambazonke effect of an indiscriminate collateral damage on ZanuPF members – some of them my close relatives – who did me no wrong in November 2017 and others who in fact were among the Angels who ensured my safety and that of my family and my colleagues at a time of great danger to us in November 2017, when most if not all of those who are now asking me what has changed wished worse and even death upon us in November 2017.

The indiscriminate collateral damage of my criticism of ZanuPF between November 2017 and circa mid June 2021 was not only on ZanuPF members who had done me no wrong, but it was also on the nationalist project which is historically represented by ZanuPF – the one about the ethos, values and legacy of the nationalist liberation struggle -a project to which I am inextricably connected and committed, ideologically and existentially. 

So, in a nutshell, my criticism of ZanuPF between November 2017 and circa mid 2021 lacked the necessary nuance, because it was bambazonke and thus indiscriminate in approach and, as a result, it had unintended collateral damage on ZanuPF members who had done me no wrong, and it also had unintended collateral damage on the nationalist project – which is historically connected with ZanuPF – to which I’m inextricably tied, ideologically and existentially.

That had to be corrected for posterity!

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This post was last modified on June 12, 2023 1:50 pm

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Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

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