Tanzania's President John Magufuli. AFP PHOTO | FILE
Do you know any way to get the non-religious guys to start
paying attention to the “Word of God” when all other tricks have failed
to make them take the Road to Damascus and to see the light?
I
know one: Get someone in a position of authority to block all avenues
of protest, of open dialogue and contestation; let that someone put
barriers in the path of political organisations so they no longer can
organise their activities as they wish; let that someone bring the
parliament under his wing and give it orders to execute, as if it were
an arm of the Executive; let him get into the habit of ordering the
judges and magistrates to do his bidding instead of consulting the
constitution, laws and regulations, so much so that those who go to the
courts to seek justice meet only with members of the Executive in robes;
let there be a tame and timid press that gets into the habit of
censoring itself before it is censored, bludgeoned and banned by
executive orders.
I can assure you, this is the fastest
way of making religious folks out of agnostics, doubters, unbelievers
and atheists, because I have seen it work in Tanzania.
President
John Pombe Magufuli has managed to pretty much silence all those who
would normally challenge his arbitrary decisions.
That
parliament has been neutered, opposition parties are on trial before
the courts and in remand prisons for the flimsiest of reasons, and the
press – already anaemic and toothless, anyway — is all but dead and
buried.
Whispers
The
senior citizens who have served this country over the years after
Independence are so cowed that they dare not utter a word, not of
protest but of counsel, for fear of having some skeletons of theirs
dragged out of already half-open cupboards.
Still, in private they whisper their apprehensions at what Tanzania is fast becoming, and these whispers are for your ears only.
The
only constituency that seems capable of raising its voice publicly
against this terrible state of affairs – I use my words advisedly – is
the clergy and I suspect this is because it is hard for those who love
to grandstand as the allies of God to attack His very envoys among us.
So, the clerics kind of get away with it.
This means
that those who love Tanzania and who are averse to seeing it slide
farther down the slippery path of despotism and intolerance have found a
new ally in the Church, even if they are not church-goers.
The
period leading up to Easter has been another occasion for this to
manifest itself. On the Ides of March — March 15, the date on which
Julius Caesar was assassinated — the Lutheran Church issued a pastoral
letter in which, even as they congratulated the authorities on some of
their achievements, they excoriated the authorities “for suppressing
civic liberties; promoting a climate of fear caused by abductions,
torture, disappearances of individuals, armed attacks on political
leaders, political assassinations, intimidation, fabricated court cases,
wrongful use of security forces against civilians and the constriction
of the space in which the people can express themselves.”
Further,
the Easter letter pointed at “the diminution of the powers of
Parliament, the Judiciary and the electoral commission, including the
weakening of local authorities; the absence of an atmosphere of freedom
to elect and be elected, with most elections marred by violence,
chicanery and intimidation.
Perhaps one of the most
important charges was one that pointed to the rising levels of hate
among the people, “which can easily become the source of vengeful acts,
despair and low participation by the people in elective processes which
affect their lives.”
The bishops warned that in a
situation where the government shirks its responsibility to safeguard
the lives of its citizens, evil elements will slip into the gaps and
take matters into their own hands purporting to act on behalf of the
government.
“Innocent blood spells doom for this
generation and the coming generation. Till now, we have witnessed
bloodshed which will judge us all, and all the authorities. God will
judge us Tanzanians as He judged Cain, (saying), ‘The voice of the blood
of your brother cries to me from under the earth.’”
Taken with the Roman Catholic letter released at the beginning of Lent, this is another powerful indictment of our rulers.
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
No comments :
Post a Comment