By Luke Tamborinyoka YOUR Excellency, President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Sunday April 18 was Independence Day — a once-hallowed day that has since lost its glitz because the requisite freedoms associated with the occasion are glaringly absent in this cursed nation. Coming in the week that Zanu PF had introduced Constitutional Amendment Bill No 2 which seeks to create an imperial President — the same week that the same analogue party sought to resurrect its terror troops popularly known as the Green Bombers — this year’s Independence Day was a hollow occasion whose emptiness just rendered it utterly meaningless. Your Excellency, the sons and daughters of this land paid the ultimate price in the hope that their struggle would yield a country that respects basic freedoms, particularly the rights and freedoms of speech, movement and assembly. Alas, political independence came alone, short of the requisite freedoms for which many lost their limbs so that the whims and hopes of future generations would walk again! The right to vote, which was one of the key grievances of the repressed black majority, has been routinely betrayed as evidenced by pilfered polls that have resulted in the successive vicious cycle of disputed polls. Zimbabweans have now been brazenly denied the right to vote as the regime hides under the COVID-19 pandemic to avoid the holding of by-elections that are long overdue, even as the regime has held its own district co-ordinating committee elections and allowed its surrogates to hold their elective congress. On Sunday, we commemorated the Independence Day when a host of political prisoners of conscience were needlessly behind bars on trumped-up charges while the Zanu PF criminal elite is roaming scot-free. Your Excellency, our real crisis is that in 1980, independence came without the requisite freedoms, rendering any claims of independence trite and vacuous. The conviction of Makomborero Haruzivishe and the repression levels that have simply run amok are making any claims to independence a sick joke. You have not only proved to be a Robert Mugabe on steroids, but have proved to be a threat to the repressive legacy of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich. But perhaps the biggest tragedy is that Zimbabwe’s independence came without the attendant freedoms. Your Excellency, renowned poet and author, Freedom T V Nyamubaya, in an epic poem, so aptly captures the dilemma of a vacuous political independence that came without the requisite freedoms. The following poem by the respected poet captures Zimbabwe’s parlous predicament through an epic metaphorical illustration which only a luminary writer could muster: Once upon a time there was a boy and a girl forced to leave their home by armed robbers . The boy was Independence The girl was Freedom While fighting back, they got married After the big war they went back home Everybody prepared for the big wedding Drinks and food abounded Even the disabled felt able The whole village gathered waiting Freedom and Independence were more popular than Jesus Independence came But F