Chamisa’s soft exit and the search for a spine: What Zimbabwe’s opposition must do now

Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 25 November 2025
📘 Source: Nehanda Radio

If Nelson Chamisa has indeed swapped Harare’s potholes for Harvard’s hallways, then the most bankable opposition brand of the last decade has chosen elevation as neutralisation. You don’t jail a phenomenon you can politely professionalise. Give it a lanyard, a library card, and a long runway.

When (or if) it returns, it returns as a keynote—credentialled, moderated, and carefully sponsor-compliant. This is not a character attack. It’s an autopsy of a method: how a competitive authoritarian state prefers its critics—brilliant, harmless, and offshore.

And now the real question my readers keep asking: What next—for the three million plus voters who still want a country, not a cartel? How we arrived at this silence (briefly, and without romance) The CCC was built as a secret: no public constitution, vaporous structures, and candidate selection by incense and instinct. The result was elegant sabotage—by the time Sengezo Tshabangu pulled the fire alarm, there wasn’t a legal building left to evacuate.

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Pacification as strategy: In moments that demanded disciplined civic confrontation, we got carefully chosen scriptures. Hope is not a plan; devotion is not mobilisation. Job Sikhala and others discovered that prison letters don’t trend as well as Bible verses.

The organisational sin: Half the polling stations uncovered by agents, funds that never quite reached the trenches, and a logistics stack converted into liturgy. You don’t need ingenious rigging when the other side refuses paperwork. The sabbatical solution: A PhD on the militarisation of elections is excellent scholarship.

It is also the perfect political sabbatical—neutralisation wearing a graduation gown. None of this absolves ZANU-PF’s machinery of coercion and capture. It does indict a style of opposition leadership that confused charisma for chassis and vibes for victory. The regime’s game board (and why a Harvard lanyard is helpful):

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Nehanda Radio • November 25, 2025

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