Zimbabwe Will Amend Its Constitution – Alone

Reports that Western governments – notably Canada, Sweden, and Switzerland – are covertly midwifing an opposition coalition against Constitutional Amendment No. 3 (2026) should surprise no serious student of Zimbabwe’s post-2000 political economy. The architecture is familiar: finance proxy platforms, elevate “civil society” fronts such as the Constitution Defenders Forum and the Defend the Constitution Platform, deploy seasoned intermediaries, and repackage regime-change ambitions as constitutional guardianship. It is intervention by indirection.

Zimbabwe’s Constitution is not an annex to Western foreign policy. It is a domestic covenant, amendable through lawful, sovereign procedures. Constitutional reform is neither aberrant nor authoritarian; it is the ordinary grammar of statecraft. From Paris to Ottawa, constitutions have been revised to meet evolving national imperatives. Zimbabwe’s review is no different. What is different is the reflexive Western impulse to internationalise our internal processes while sanctimoniously preaching sovereign equality. States that sustained two decades of sanctions – measures that crippled hospitals, industry, and currency stability – cannot plausibly claim moral trusteeship over Zimbabwe’s constitutional trajectory.

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In the Age of Artificial Intelligence – Secure the Land, Secure the Claims

There are few Zimbabweans better placed to comment on technological disruption than Trevor Ncube. So when he speaks about the sweeping impact artificial intelligence will have across economic sectors, it is worth listening. He witnessed, in real time and in public, how the digital revolution dismantled the traditional news business model that had sustained media houses for decades. Classifieds migrated online. Advertising fragmented. Attention atomised. News became instant, abundant and algorithmically distributed. If anyone understands how swiftly technology can erode once-stable professions, it is him. And on one central point, he is absolutely correct: knowledge-work is exposed, and denial is fatal.

But Zimbabwe’s larger story goes even deeper. Artificial intelligence will not simply disrupt services; it will reorganise the real economy itself. It will not stop at lawyers, bankers, accountants or property agents. It will reach creatives, coders, farmers, miners, logistics operators and even the AI industry itself. This is not a sectoral tremor. It is a structural shift.
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Aid with Conditions – Why Zimbabwe Chose Principle Over $350 Million

Zimbabwe recently rejected a proposed US$350 million health funding agreement with the United States after President Emmerson Mnangagwa directed his government to halt negotiations. The deal, presented under Washington’s America First Global Health Strategy, was intended to shape future US health support to Zimbabwe. However, Harare concluded that its conditions were incompatible with national sovereignty.

Two elements reportedly raised serious concern. First, the agreement sought direct access to Zimbabwe’s health data for a defined period – something officials viewed as excessive and potentially intrusive. Second, the US reportedly pushed for access to Zimbabwe’s critical mineral resources within the broader framework of the arrangement. In addition, Zimbabwe objected on principle to entering a bilateral health architecture with a country that had withdrawn from the World Health Organisation, arguing that such a move would weaken multilateral global health governance. More …

Zimbabwe Must Not Blink: Mutapa Investment Fund Must Lock Down Tongaat Hulett’s Lowveld Assets

I recently read Munyaradzi Hoto’s analysis on X about the demise of Tongaat Hulett. It sent me down a rabbit hole of court filings, business reports, creditor positioning, and the kind of corporate manoeuvring that could easily produce a blockbuster documentary. Yet for all the South Africa-centred drama, the most sobering realisation came later: Tongaat Hulett’s Zimbabwe operation in the Lowveld is not a minor subsidiary caught in someone else’s storm. It is a major node in the entire matrix. And once you see that, it becomes difficult to avoid the obvious conclusion – our government must ensure this asset becomes Zimbabwean-controlled going forward, through a lawful, market-based transaction anchored by Mutapa Investment Fund. More …

VIVA 2030; Why Not?

The debate around Constitutional Amendment No. 3 is often clouded by familiar political slogans rather than careful thought. Yet when examined through the lenses of institutional development, economic planning and constitutional procedure, extending President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s tenure to 2030 can be understood not as mere political convenience, but as a strategic decision aimed at long-term national consolidation.

1. Constitutional change within the law

A constitution is not a museum piece; it is a working document designed to respond to changing national realities. If an amendment follows the procedures set out in the Constitution – through Parliament and other lawful processes – then it is an exercise in democracy, not a violation of it. The power to amend is built into the constitutional design precisely to keep it relevant and functional. More …

Understanding the 7-Year Election Cycle

This infographic explains Zimbabwe’s proposed shift from a five-year to a seven-year electoral cycle across all levels of government, while maintaining the constitutional two-term presidential limit. It highlights the legal basis for the change, clarifies that no national referendum is required for adjusting election cycles, and outlines the strategic rationale – policy continuity, institutional stability and alignment with comparative democratic practice.

Happy Birthday, President R.G. Mugabe.

On this day, history pauses to acknowledge a man whose name is inseparable from Zimbabwe’s modern story. You stood at the intersection of intellect and resistance – a teacher turned liberation leader, a prisoner who emerged unbroken, and a statesman who carried the burden of nationhood at its most fragile hour. More …

Reputation Is a Currency – Stop Burning It Abroad

I listened carefully to Blessed Mhlanga’s address in Geneva yesterday. As he spoke, one thought would not leave me: does he understand that words uttered in Geneva do not remain in Geneva? They travel. They are recorded. They are cited. They become material for policy briefs, risk assessments and diplomatic memoranda. They may also carry legal consequences back home.

There is an old proverb that says, “The coward lives long enough to point out the grave of the brave man to his children.” Properly understood, it is not a celebration of cowardice. It is a warning against reckless heroics. It reminds us that foolish bravery often ends in ruin, while caution and judgement preserve both life and purpose. In politics, as in war, uncalibrated boldness can destroy the very cause it claims to advance. More …