Heaven knows where we are going, but Magufuli knows he
can walk on water
By Jenerali Ulimwengu
THE EAST AFRICAN
Posted Saturday, June 25 2016 at 21:25
In the increasingly constipated political atmosphere
ushered in by the excessive populism of President John Pombe Magufuli,
Tanzanians are learning to swim with the tide and to roll with the punches,
without necessarily knowing where they are headed.
It kind of reminds one of the old songs by the Osibisa
group, “We are going/Heaven knows where we are going.” With all the good deeds
the new president has enacted, and with all the great declarations he
has uttered, Magufuli has earned so many plaudits that there is a real and
present danger he may have started to believe he can walk on water.
It’s alright to force people who should be paying
taxes to pay them, and to punish those who are found to be criminally culpable,
and to get rid of the corrupt, lax and inept, and to plug holes through which
the national exchequer is haemorrhaging.
Still, one would like the action taken to be taken in a
manner that is legal, transparent, universally applicable and predictable. It
will be a sad day indeed when we sacrifice legality and transparency to the
expediency of achieving short-term gains that may not be sustainable going
forward.
We all know something about the MBWA style
ofgovernment, Management by Walking About, which people in this country
practised many years ago, but whose measures -- though hailed by a
gullible populace at the time -- have left no positive legacy.
There is no substitute for robust systems and tested
implementation strategies and processes, all anchored in a
philosophical outlook that mobilises popular support and voluntary
adherence. But that, I admit, may look like a tall order, involving hours and
hours of reflection and consensus building.
The easier way is for whoever happens to be at the top of
the food chain to get up in the morning and, depending on what their dreams
were last night, give orders for this or that to be done, this one or that
other one to be hired or fired. That is easy but costly in the long run, not
least because it lends itself to perennial fresh starts.
Politics is king in all matters pertaining to governance,
and all who aspire to governing others must be versed in the art of politics,
which -- when practiced by those who understand what it means –boils down to
the ability to marshal ideas against other ideas, to pit arguments against
other arguments, and by a process of distillation, to extract the best for a
given society for the given moment.
For the moment, I say, because today’s heresay may become
tomorrow’s dogma in the ever-dynamic interface between ideas andphilosophies.
Otherwise, after killing Corpenicus, the Catholic Church
would have gone on to kill Galileo as well. Much earlier, after Socrates
had been made to drink the hemlock, the Athenians should have gone on to wipe
out the whole tribe of troublemaking questioners. And, much closer
to us, Madiba should have died a terrorist.
Tied to what I’m saying is an idea I’ve heard so many
times before but which has made a new appearance with advent of Magufuli.
University students are being told that they went to college to study
and not to engage in politics, which to me, is, honestly, hogwash. If you
do not do politics at university, then maybe you should be barred from entering
politics forever.
University is that space when you are coming of age, and
your mind is going through the pressure cooker of new and exciting
learning that may have been denied to you in lower learning institutions. Even
in those schools, progressiveteachers introduce their boys and girls to
elementary critical thinking, guiding them in techniques of argumentation
anddisputation.
That’s where true politicians are born. To me, anyone who
discovers politics after they left university is either a fake
looking for a job in the political industry, or he is the champion of
latebloomers.
To the students who may be confused by what
our rulers are telling them, I say, do politics if politic s is your
thing, and don’t listen to all the statements designed to turn you in tounquestioning
zombies doing their bidding. Do politics as if your life depended on it,
because it actually does.
Jenerali Ulimwengu Jenerali Ulimwengu is chairman of
the board of the Raia Mwema newspaper and an advocate of the High Court in
Dar es Salaam. E-mail:ulimwengu@jenerali.com
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