Zimbabwe: Former President Robert Mugabe’s Last Speech in Office
By Robert Mugabe
Thursday, November
23, 2017.
Fellow Zimbabweans, I
address you tonight on the back of a meeting I held today with the nation’s
security forces command element.
This meeting which was facilitated by a mediating team… followed an operation
mounted by the Zimbabwean Defence Forces in the week that has gone by, and
which was triggered by concerns from their reading of the state of affairs in
our country and in the ruling Zanu-PF party.
Whatever the pros and cons of the way they went about registering those
concerns, I as the President of Zimbabwe and as their Commander in Chief do
acknowledge the issues they have drawn my attention to, and do believe these
were raised in the spirit of honesty and out of deep and patriotic concern for
the stability of our nation and for the welfare of our people.
As I address you I am also aware of a whole range of concerns which have come
from you all as citizens of our great country and which deserve our
untrammelled attention.
Today’s meeting with the command element has underscored the need for us to
collectively start processes that return our nation to normalcy so that all our
people can go about their business unhindered in an environment of perfect
peace and security assured that the law and order prevail as before and endure
well into the future.
If there is any one observation we have made and drawn from events of the last
week it is the unshakable pedestal upon which rests our state of peace and law
and order, amply indicating that as Zimbabweans we are generally a peaceably
disposed people and with a given-ness to express our grievances and to resolve
our differences ourselves and with a level of dignity and restraint so rare to
many other nations. This is to be admired. Indeed, such traits must form the
path of our national character and personality. Yes, a veritable resource we
summon and draw upon in times of vicissitudes.
The operation I have alluded to did not amount to a threat to our
well-cherished constitutional order, nor was it a challenge to my authority as
head of state and government, not even as commander in chief of the Zimbabwean
Defence Forces. To the man, the commend element remained respectful and
comported themselves with diktats and mores of constitutionalism. True, a few
incidents may have occurred here and there but they are being corrected. I am
happy that throughout the short period the pillars of state remained functional.
Even happier for me and arising from today’s meeting is a strong sense of
collegiality and comradeship now binding the various arms of our security
establishment. This should redound to greater peace and offer an abiding sense
of security in communities and in our entire nation.
Among the issues discussed is that relating to our economy, which as we all
know is going through a difficult patch. Of greater concern to our commanders
are the well-founded fears that the lack of unity and commonness of purpose in
both party and government was translating into perceptions of inattentiveness
to the economy. Open public spats between officials in the party and government
exacerbated by multiple conflicting messages from both the party and government
made the criticisms levelled at us inescapable.
Amidst all this, flagship projects already adopted by government stood stalled
or mired in needless controversies. All this needs to stop as we inaugurate a
new work culture and pace which will show a strong sense of purpose and
commitment to turning around our economy in terms of our policies. The
government remains committed to improving the social and material conditions of
the people. Government will soon unveil an entrepreneurial skills and business
development program which will empower and unleash gainful projects at our
growth points and in rural areas.
Fellow Zimbabweans we are a nation born out of a protracted struggle for
national independence. Our roots lie in that epochal struggle whose goals and
ideals must guide our present and structure our future.
The tradition of resistance is our collective legacy, whose core tenets must
[be] subscribed [to] by all across generations and across times. Indeed, these
too were a concern of our commanders who themselves were makers of that
revolution and often at very tender ages and at great personal peril. We still
have in our various communities of veterans of that founding struggle who might
have found the prevailing management of national and party issues quite
alienating. This must be corrected without delay, include ensuring that these
veterans continue to play central roles in the lives of our nation. We must all
recognise that their participation in the war of liberation exacted lifelong
costs that, while hardly repayable, may still be assuaged and ameliorated.
In respect of the party and the party issued raised both by the commanders and
by the general membership of Zanu-PF, these too stand acknowledged. They have
to be attended to with a great sense of urgency, however I am aware that as a
party of liberation, Zanu-PF has over the years written elaborate rules and
procedures that guide the operations of all its organs and personnel.
Indeed,
the current criticisms raised against it by the command element and some of its
members have arisen from a well-founded perception that the party was
stretching or even failing in its own rules and procedures. The way forward
thus cannot be based on swapping vying cliques that ride roughshod over party
rules and procedures. There has to be a net return to the guiding principles of
our party as enshrined in its constitution, which must apply fairly and
equitably in all situations and before all members. The era of victimisation
and arbitrary decisions must be put behind [us], so as we all embrace a new
ethos predicated on the supreme law of our party and nourished by an abiding
sense of camaraderie.
To all, there must be a general recognition that Zanu-PF is a party of
traditions and has been served by successive generations who are bound together
by shared ideals and values, which must continue to reign supreme in our
nation.
Hints of inter-generational conflict must be resolved through harmonised
melding of old established players as they embrace and welcome new rules
through a well-defined sense of hierarchy and succession.
Indeed, all these matters will be discussed and settled at the forthcoming
Congress within the framework of a clear roadmap that seeks to resolve once and
for all any omissions or contradictions that have affected our party
negatively. The Congress is due in a few weeks from now. I will preside over
its processes, that must not be prepossessed by any acts calculated to
undermine it or compromise the outcomes in the eyes of the public.
As I conclude this address I am aware that many developments have occurred in
the party or have been championed and done by individuals in the name of the
party. Given the failings of the past and the anger these might have triggered
in some quarters, such developments are quite understandable, however we cannot
be guided by bitterness or vengefulness, both of which would not make us any
better party members or any better Zimbabweans. Our hallowed policy of
reconciliation which we pronounced in 1980 and through which we reached out to
those which occupied and oppressed us for nearly a century and those we had
traded fire with in a bitter war surely cannot be unavailable to our own, both
in the party and in our nation.
We must learn to forgive and to resolve contradictions, real or perceived, in a
comradely Zimbabwean spirit. I am confident that from tonight our whole nation
at all levels gets refocused as we put our shoulder to the wheel amidst the
promising agricultural season already upon us.
Let us all move forward reminding ourselves of our wartime mantra: [You and I
have work to do].
I thank you and goodnight