Categories: Stories

Why Mnangagwa has roped in Coventry and is wooing Grobbelaar

Sport in general, and particularly gifted sports people, have been known to rouse feelings of national unity. In the process, they instill a sense of patriotism and pride in their countries.

Good examples include George Weah, the soccer legend from Liberia now the President of his country and Imran Khan, the cricketing star from Pakistan, now its Prime Minister.

Notable sports figures have managed, to some extent, to unify their troubled nations. In the process they have shown how powerful a force sport can be.

This salient observation has not escaped Zimbabwe’s newly elected President, Emmerson Mnangagwa.

In a bid to restore and paper over the badly damaged relations between the governing ZANU-PF party and the country’s white community both inside and outside Zimbabwe, Mnangagwa has appointed the former swimming sensation, Kirsty Coventry as Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation.

The 35-year-old is a seven time Olympic medallist. She is the only African to break the 1:00 min barrier in the womens 100m backstroke. She also has the highest number of individual Olympic medals of all female swimmers in history.

But Coventry’s appointment is not where Mnangagwa ended. He also reached out to the flamboyant footballer, Bruce Grobbelaar, the former goalkeeper for the Zimbabwean national football team as well as British football club Liverpool whose nickname is “Jungleman”.

In an interview he described Mnangagwa’s call which started with the President saying: “Hello, Jungleman, how are you?”

By wooing Coventry and Grobbelaar, Mnangagwa is clearly hoping to achieve a number of outcomes.

The first is that he is hoping to repair the damaged relations between ZANU-PF and Zimbabwe’s white community.

As a long shot, he might also be hoping that this will help normalise relations with the West which could, in turn, unblock much needed foreign direct investment.

Working with the hugely popular Coventry and equally liked Grobbelaar could also lure the young urban electorate back to ZANU-PF. They left the party in droves for the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) when it was launched in 1999.

When Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980 the country’s population stood at just over 7 million people. The white population was around 230 000.

This began to decline steadily. White Zimbabweans began to emigrate to countries such as South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

The exodus increased significantly after 2000, when the ZANU-PF government began embarking on violent land grabs that resulted in Zimbabwe’s economy going into meltdown.

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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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