If there is one individual in Zimbabwean politics who will say anything and
everything at the click of a finger simply in order to win his masters
accolades, it is unsurprisingly that charlatan Jonathan Moyo . Apparently the duty Moyo owes to his dictatorial master is one that he is
prepared to fulfil even if it only serves to cheapen himself in the eyes of the
people of Zimbabwe. Surely, our hearts have to go out to the unfortunate and poor people of
Tsholotsho who must certainly by now hate themselves for having elected such a
weak sycophant as their parliamentary representative. Throughout his career Moyo has developed and embraced such a sickening
propensity to abruptly switch from an entirely sensible point of view to one
that is totally outrageous.
Political expediency
He has only to be convinced that it is politically expedient. Everything
else can be flagrantly ignored.
There is not a single person familiar with Zimbabwean politics who would
honestly profess ignorance of the fact that each time Moyo has fallen out of
Mugabes favour he has criticised him.
Indeed, they would equally confirm that whenever the opportunity to put a
smile on the old mans face has presented itself, Moyo has profusely sung the
dictators praises. In his piece, The cancer of politics of personalities, published in The
Herald on 27 May 2010, Moyo, in typically desperate fashion, took pains to pay
homage to the controversial and controversially appointed Judge President
George Chiweshe- apparently in an attempt to appeal to the latters ear ahead of
his day in court for allegedly defaming Roy Bennett. The truth of the matter is that Moyo has every reason to be terrified
because, if brought before an impartial Judge, the case against him is a
compelling one. No doubt he takes consolation from Zanu (PF)s intrinsic
conviction that anything that is associated with Mugabe is beyond the reach of
the law. However, what really prompted this writer to comment on a piece otherwise
deserving of no comment at all was Moyos ridiculous and patently untrue
description of Mugabe as an iconic African leader with a towering global
stature. Such toadyism is simply sickening. If that is what it means to be a politician then, rather than becoming one,
I would much rather stick to being a commentator committed to keeping the
bastards honest!
Alarming inconsistency
A few examples will serve to illustrate Moyos alarming inconsistency. Just before the 2008 harmonised elections Moyo went on about how Mugabe
should go now because it was in his own best interest and in the national
interest as well. He argued that Mugabes standing had plummeted both in and outside the
country and that his continued presence in office had become such an excessive
burden to the welfare of the state and such a fatal danger to the public
interest of Zimbabweans. Moyo correctly further argued that Mugabe lacked the vision, stature and
energy to effectively run the country, let alone his party. Of Operation Murambatsvina he wrote that that evil exercise attested to the
fact that Mugabe is without compassion. One wonders what really has changed between then and now for Moyo to now
consider it a privilege for anyone to serve in a Mugabe-led government. In his recent unsuccessful attempt to sell Mugabes presidency as one that
promotes and protects the rule of law, Moyo unashamedly referred to Tsvangirais
justified calls for an end to Bennetts continued persecution as the most
blatant and most outrageous attack on the rule of law since 1980. If Moyo wants clear examples of what really amounts to grave attacks on the
rule of law he needs only to look at his masters monstrous political record. It was Moyos master and not Tsvangirai who arbitrarily detained, cruelly
assaulted and devilishly tortured thousands of innocent Zimbabweans in
Matabeleland during the years 1985 and 1986. It was his master and not Tsvangirai who, in a 1982 speech to Parliament,
said of Gukurahundi: An eye for an eye and an ear for an ear may not be
adequate in our circumstances. We might very well demand two ears for one ear
and two eyes for one eye. Indeed it was the dictator and not Tsvangirai who, in perhaps the clearest
expression of his contempt for the rule of law, said: The government cannot
allow the technicalities of the law to fetter its hands. We shall, therefore,
proceed as government in a manner we feel as fitting; and some of the measures
we shall take are measures which will be extra legal.
Free speech
More recently, several Zimbabweans have either been prosecuted or
threatened with prosecution for insulting the person of the President simply
for exercising what is recognised elsewhere as their inalienable right to free
speech. Rule of law in its purest form envisages that no one is above the law and
everyone is subject to it. It is Mugabe and his cronies who have set themselves
above the law.
Accordingly, no one can take seriously anything that charlatan Moyo ever
says without causing their beloved ones a great deal of anxiety about the
soundness of their mind. Mugabe has not only wrought great evil on the people of Zimbabwe but his
evil has infected those around him as is evidenced when we see the keenness with
which Moyo licks his masters boots.
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