Experts agree President Mnangagwa has kept Zimbabwe moving toward the goals that fighters died for during the freedom wars before 1980. The country marks 45 years free from colonial rule next month with big parties planned in Nembudziya, Gokwe. The celebration theme focuses on sharing power with local areas as everyone works together for better lives by 2030. This matches how Mnangagwa wants every part of Zimbabwe to grow, not just big cities.
Political expert Obert Gutu points out this anniversary matters because Zimbabwe has almost reached five decades since breaking free from ninety years of racist rule. He believes the armed struggle that brought freedom aimed for a fair government where most citizens have an equal say. The fighters wanted land reform to fix unfair farm ownership from colonial days. They fought against racism and tribal divisions and demanded equal growth plus basic human rights for everyone.
Gutu thinks Zimbabwe mostly stays true to these goals but must work harder to fight corruption and better share wealth between rich and poor. He sees the celebration theme as perfect because it shows exactly where the government wants to take the nation. Building an upper middle-income economy remains the sacred target everyone should help achieve by ending poverty and creating stable business conditions.
Another analyst, Tongai Dana, notes these celebrations happen as the government makes real progress in schools, hospitals, and farming. He says Independence Day lets people honor war heroes plus check how well the country follows the dreams those heroes fought for. Mass education investment helped Zimbabwe reach one of Africa's highest reading rates. The controversial land reform program, despite problems, changed farm ownership patterns more than almost any policy since colonial days ended.
Under Mnangagwa, Zimbabwe focuses hard on steady money value, building better roads and bridges, and talking again with countries that stopped relations earlier. The push toward making products locally, growing enough food through modern farm machines, and fixing major projects like Beitbridge Border proves leaders want real national growth. These actions show a clear commitment to helping regular people live better lives every day.
Godwine Mureriwa, another political watcher, believes birthday parties should bring peace and togetherness among all citizens working toward the 2030 goals. He wants everyone to reject hate speech and fighting between groups. Zimbabwe became famous worldwide for its quality education and hard workers. These strengths should help grow business across every industry as the world changes to having multiple power centers instead of just America and Europe leading everything.
Mureriwa thinks average families should see their money problems shrink as foreign investors help turn raw minerals into finished products worth much more cash. President Mnangagwa started projects across every province, pushing the nation toward becoming a wealthy society. He changed how freedom parties happen each year, moving them around different areas instead of always staying in the capital city. This ensures all Zimbabwe citizens can join the fun near their homes, showing how serious he feels about giving power back to local communities.
Political expert Obert Gutu points out this anniversary matters because Zimbabwe has almost reached five decades since breaking free from ninety years of racist rule. He believes the armed struggle that brought freedom aimed for a fair government where most citizens have an equal say. The fighters wanted land reform to fix unfair farm ownership from colonial days. They fought against racism and tribal divisions and demanded equal growth plus basic human rights for everyone.
Gutu thinks Zimbabwe mostly stays true to these goals but must work harder to fight corruption and better share wealth between rich and poor. He sees the celebration theme as perfect because it shows exactly where the government wants to take the nation. Building an upper middle-income economy remains the sacred target everyone should help achieve by ending poverty and creating stable business conditions.
Another analyst, Tongai Dana, notes these celebrations happen as the government makes real progress in schools, hospitals, and farming. He says Independence Day lets people honor war heroes plus check how well the country follows the dreams those heroes fought for. Mass education investment helped Zimbabwe reach one of Africa's highest reading rates. The controversial land reform program, despite problems, changed farm ownership patterns more than almost any policy since colonial days ended.
Under Mnangagwa, Zimbabwe focuses hard on steady money value, building better roads and bridges, and talking again with countries that stopped relations earlier. The push toward making products locally, growing enough food through modern farm machines, and fixing major projects like Beitbridge Border proves leaders want real national growth. These actions show a clear commitment to helping regular people live better lives every day.
Godwine Mureriwa, another political watcher, believes birthday parties should bring peace and togetherness among all citizens working toward the 2030 goals. He wants everyone to reject hate speech and fighting between groups. Zimbabwe became famous worldwide for its quality education and hard workers. These strengths should help grow business across every industry as the world changes to having multiple power centers instead of just America and Europe leading everything.
Mureriwa thinks average families should see their money problems shrink as foreign investors help turn raw minerals into finished products worth much more cash. President Mnangagwa started projects across every province, pushing the nation toward becoming a wealthy society. He changed how freedom parties happen each year, moving them around different areas instead of always staying in the capital city. This ensures all Zimbabwe citizens can join the fun near their homes, showing how serious he feels about giving power back to local communities.