I harbour no hatred against Hichilema. What I hate is his bad leadership- Sishuwa Sishuwa

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Sishuwa Sishuwa

“You just hate Hichilema”: The dramatic fall of Zambia’s president

By Sishuwa Sishuwa

Hakainde Hichilema stood in the queue to becoming President of Zambia for 15 years before voters finally removed him from it in August 2021. This demonstrates how badly the man wanted this job. But it has taken him only five years in office to display his unfitness for the role. When it comes to the bigger national issues, such as safeguarding our cherished democracy, getting the best out of Zambia’s mineral wealth, respecting the constitution and the rule of law, fighting corruption beyond rhetoric, genuine promotion of national unity and equitable distribution of appointments to public service positions, sorting out the cost-of-living crisis and the deplorable conditions of life for most Zambians, Hichilema has lamentably failed.



In fact, I would go as far as saying that the President has become a clear and present danger to Zambia’s economy, to our democracy, our constitutional order, our nationhood and its ‘One Zambia Nation’ foundation, and to the lives of ordinary Zambians. Voting Hichilema out of office will be the highest expression of patriotism. As I have previously stated, I am convinced that Hichilema will lose the election on 13 August. The only thing that can save him from defeat is pre-ballot death (of any candidate) or industrial scale vote-rigging. I really hope that we Zambians will never again elect a lying, tribal, corrupt, unpatriotic, vindictive, hypocritical, lawless, and undemocratic scumbag.



In addition to his policy failures on major issues of public concern, one reason why Hichilema is losing the election (unless he rigs it on an industrial scale) is because of having extremist supporters, mostly Zambezi supremacists, who dismiss legitimate criticism of his leadership actions as hate speech and consequently enable his continued failure to be receptive to criticism, to reflect on the feedback provided by the governed, and to change for the better.


When citizens (be it the Catholic Bishops, opposition parties, civic actors, or ordinary Zambians like me) raise governance concerns, they do so in the spirit of accountable democratic governance. They do not do so because they hate the president as a person, hate his ethnic identity, or hate where he was born. I insist that a better Zambia is possible but we won’t get it if we treat criticism of presidential leadership failure as expression of hate.



Unfortunately, even Hichilema himself has embraced this warped thinking that any criticism of his leadership actions is hate speech. This attitude has deprived him of the much needed feedback on his leadership performance and capacity to listen to divergent views, consequently impoverishing his presidency. We must embrace the unfamiliar, eschew haste in passing judgement, and be more tolerant and understanding. These qualities are especially essential  to those in public leadership roles.



I once raised concern that we seem to have prepared different standards for this president compared to those who came before him. If a leader can only provide five hours of electricity to the people in a day, they have failed. If a leader can only increase the cost of living, they have failed. If a leader…I can go on. In addition to denying the president the benefit of legitimate public feedback on his performance, misconstruing criticism as hate makes it look like the responsibility of holding our public leaders to account falls on those who either love him or hail from the region where the president does not come from. If his supporters and Tongas, Lozis and Zambians from Northwestern Province join in calling out the wrongs of Hichilema, he will no longer play the tribal card of reducing all criticism of his leadership to ethnic hatred.



In the uncritical minds of some of the president’s supporters, I criticise Hichilema because I hate him! Most of the individuals who hold this view are people who repeatedly criticise me on this platform, even when their criticism is quite often devoid of reason or substance. I do not think those who criticise me do so because they hate me. I think they criticise me, even if I hold no elected public office, simply because they have a different take, different opinions, on things. Why is it so hard to apply the same logic to my criticism of an elected public leader like Hichilema who is accountable to us, the public?



I have been providing regular political commentaries on Zambian affairs since 2009. Why was my much stronger criticism of Hichilema’s predecessors, namely Rupiah Banda, Michael Sata, and Edgar Lungu, not considered hatred of these individual leaders?  In fact, many of the individuals who today accuse me of harbouring hatred for Hichilema were people who were very happy with my much stinging criticism of the leadership failures of his predecessors.



When I called Sata a tribalist and undemocratic leader who did not listen to advise, and provided evidence in support of my conclusions, they were happy to cheer me on, even as Sata’s supporters said I was bitter and a Hichilema supporter. When I called Lungu a tribalist and corrupt leader, and provided evidence in support of my conclusions, they were happy to cheer me on, even as Lungu’s supporters said I was bitter and petitioned the police to arrest me for sedition.



https://x.com/ssishuwa/status/1428652700980453380?s=20

Some of Hichilema’s supporters, as part of the enjoyment of their exercise of the right to free expression, even insult me, call me names, or outrightly declare that they dislike me. Of course I would prefer content-based discussion, but if the best that anyone’s mind can do is to insult me, I will consider their actions as part of the right to free expression. I recognise that people have the right to dislike me, to call me names, to wish me whatever they desire, to feel however they want about me. I have no problem with all this. I do not speak to be liked or secure the validation of anyone. I speak to express myself and I respect the right of other people to do the same. As I have repeatedly stated, free speech is not just for the people or thoughts we like or agree with; it is also for people we despise and opinions that we do not support.



https://x.com/ssishuwa/status/1934493029689438214?s=20

The important point is not the position I take on a given issue of public interest. It is the reasoning advanced in support of said position. If I say Hichilema is a lying, tribal, corrupt, unpatriotic, vindictive, hypocritical, lawless, and undemocratic scumbag, what is important is not simply this description; it is the reasons and evidence I have adduced in support of this conclusion. Anyone is welcome to challenge my conclusions or evidence, to say “I disagree with your argument for this and that reason.” What I totally reject is the idea that criticism of a president’s leadership actions amounts to hate; it does not.



If I point out that Hichilema is failing to ensure adequate ethnic diversity in public appointments and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view. If I point out that Hichilema is a compulsive liar and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view.

If I point out that Hichilema’s fight against corruption is a sham and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view.  If I point out that Hichilema is a compulsive liar and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view.



If I point out that Hichilema has eroded Zambia’s democracy and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view. If I point out that Hichilema has failed to reduce the cost of living, as per his campaign promise, and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view.

If I point out that Hichilema (working in cohort with his friend Situmbeko Musokotwane) has facilitated the extraction of the country’s mineral wealth by multinational corporations without ensuring sufficient returns in revenue collection for Zambia and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view. If I point out that Hichilema has failed to…and provide evidence in support of this assertion, anybody else is welcome to demonstrate weakness in my stated point of view.



Simply dismissing my criticism as an expression of my alleged hatred for Hichilema is most unhelpful. Those who do so are depriving me the opportunity to learn what I do not know and Hichilema the opportunity to adjust his leadership style and change for the better. While I do not hesitate to share my opinions on matters of public concern, I also retain the intellectual integrity of one who is willing to abandon their point of view if its weakness can be shown.

I have repeatedly stated that I harbour no hatred against Hichilema. What I hate is his bad leadership, whose meaning I have explained in the article below.

https://x.com/ssishuwa/status/2023042297718349947?s=20



There is no constitutional democracy in the world that requires citizens to love their elected leaders. Loving individuals is the responsibility of their spouses and family members. Once these individuals step up to hold elective public office, we owe them one thing: accountability or feedback on their performance. No elected public leader or their supporter should burden me or another person with any demand for affirmation or affection. In a functioning democracy, the duty of citizens is to hold their elected leaders to account so that they deliver basic services and do not undermine accountable democratic governance. This is what I have been doing across different administrations, including this one.



As early as December 2021, when I analysed Hichilma’s first 100 days in office, I raised governance concerns of his leadership in the hope that he could address them so that they do not grow into bigger problems. He did not listen.

https://africanarguments.org/2021/12/the-good-the-bad-and-the-alarming-hichilemas-first-100-days-in-zambia/

In 2022, when he was celebrating one year in office, I raised governance concerns of his leadership in the hope that he could address them so that they do not grow into bigger problems. He did not listen.



https://africanarguments.org/2022/08/an-assessment-of-president-hichilema-first-year-in-zambia/

In 2023, I raised governance concerns of his leadership in the hope that he could address them so that they do not grow into bigger problems. He did not listen.

https://africanarguments.org/2023/06/zambia-president-hichilema-five-point-plan-stay-power/

In 2024, I raised governance concerns of his leadership in the hope that he could address them so that they do not grow into bigger problems. He did not listen.

https://africanarguments.org/2024/09/that-is-no-joke-hichilema-gears-up-to-change-zambia-constitution/



In fact, as did his predecessor in 2021 in response to my criticism of the abuse of state institutions to fix critics and opponents, the president asked his supporters to report me to the police for alleged hate speech against him!

https://mg.co.za/thought-leader/2024-11-25-after-i-criticised-his-abuse-of-state-institutions-zambia-s-president-wants-me-arrested/

In 2025, I raised governance concerns of his leadership in the hope that he could address them so that they do not grow into bigger problems. He did not listen.

https://mg.co.za/thought-leader/2025-09-15-zambia-s-2026-election-how-hichilema-is-tilting-the-playing-field-against-opponents/



This year and for the many reasons that I shared in the interview on the link below, Hichilema is losing the election because he did not listen to criticism that we, as citizens, raised about his performance.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sCd4JB7HNM8&ra=m

He is also losing the election because of his extremist supporters who, in addition to a wilful but harmful failure to hold him to account, dismiss legitimate criticism of his leadership from other people as hate speech. What a pity! What a wasted opportunity! I have just read a story on a ruling party platform casually dismissing Global Witness’s report that



“Ahead of Zambia’s general election…First Quantum Minerals and its associates have been running a decades-long covert influence campaign distorting the copper-rich nation’s democracy” and that the Canadian firm has “become his [Hichilema’s] largest funder in the upcoming 2026 election after pledging up to $50 million in support.” The report adds that “FQM has reaped enormous benefits: major changes to Zambia’s tax regime have save the company $771 million between 2022 and 2025, and it has been shielded from legal scrutiny.”

https://facebook.com/100064625412288/posts/1455070683323765/?mibextid=CDWPTG

Rather than interrogating these grave concerns, the publisher, the Zambian Watchdog which is run from State House, is treating the issue so casually when Global Witness, a very credible international outlet, raises serious corruption and governance allegations. In January 2019, I raised questions about Hichilema’s relationship with foreign mining firms, but was told by his supporters that I just hate him.



https://diggers.news/guest-diggers/2019/01/28/is-hichilema-the-lapdog-of-zambias-mining-companies/

Today, we are ere. The net result is that Hichilema, who in opposition politics had positioned himself as the reformist leader Zambia needed to reclaim its democracy, eliminate corruption, unite the country, and set it on the path to economic recovery, has, in power, turned out to be nearly everything he detested about his predecessor and, in some cases, much worse. Under his watch, corruption has thrived on a massive scale, the economy is a shambles, ethnic divisions have worsened, Zambia’s previously principled foreign policy has been shredded into something unrecognisable, and democracy is essentially non-existent. The man who was expected to lead reform has instead transitioned into an aspiring despot.

https://mg.co.za/thought-leader/2025-04-23-zambia-understanding-hakainde-hichilema-s-transition-from-reformist-to-despot/



Unless he rigs the election, or eliminates his main rival, Zambians should prepare for a new administration after 13 August. Many voters have reached a point of no return and it is too late for Hichilema to change their mind. A combination of failure to listen and the “you just hate Hichilema” brigade has destroyed his once promising presidency. I see many people expressing surprise at the huge turnout at Brian Mundubile’s rallies. What they miss is that the turnout reflects the revulsion against Hichilema rather than genuine support for Brian. Even if Brian was not there, voters would have rallied behind another candidate  through which to express their opposition to Hichilema as a result of his major policy failures.

As early as 2023, wen I noticed Hichilema’s direction of travel, I warned that the greatest opposition that he and the UPND face is a politically alert and informed citizenry, not an opposition party:



“The biggest opposition that Hichilema faces is the people, particularly if he fails to lower the cost of living and tackle the huge unemployment outside the health and education sectors. They can stop opposition rallies like Edgar Lungu and the PF tried to do but if Zambians would have decided in a year or two that Hichilema must go at the next election, there is nothing that he can do to stop them….Even if Hichilema tries to, he cannot stop the people’s will. Even if he succeeds in killing the PF and in his manoeuvres to block his main political opponents from running in 2026, another platform and another candidate to serve as the outlet of opposition will be found. The voters will support any visionary patriot they see as better placed to be used as the vehicle for removing Hichilema just like they chose him as the vehicle for removing Lungu. Please tell him”.

https://lusakatimes.com/2023/11/09/the-people-will-win-in-the-end-they-always-do-sishuwa/

Hichilema did not listen. Again. This continued failure to listen prompted my conclusion two years later that “Many Zambians may not know yet who they will vote for in the 2026 presidential election, but they already know who they won’t vote for.”

https://x.com/ssishuwa/status/1923985149940871374?s=20



The truth is that I tried to warn Hichilema in good time and at different points that he was heading in the wrong direction. The President, dripping with arrogance, did not listen. Think of it this way. A bus (representing a political party in power) is transporting passengers (active citizens) from Intercity terminus (2021, being the departure point of where we did not want to be anymore) to Nakonde (2026, being the arrival point of destination before subsequently deciding whether to book the same bus for the return trip).

After leaving Intercity, some passengers notice that the bus is heading towards Livingstone (a wrong destination that takes us back to before 2021). A few of us (active citizens) decide to stand up (holding the leader to account) and confront both the driver (the president) and his conductor (Minister of Finance), demanding an explanation for why we are heading to Livingstone when we were promised that we woud be taken to Nakonde. Other passengers, mainly those who came from the ethnic group of the driver and conductor, defended the duo even before it could respond to our concerns. They repeatedly told us that “You just hate the driver. Please sit down!” One or two relatives of the conductor joined in support, saying the “The driver and the conductor are excellent and one of them has even won awards for stellar performance on his duties, including his remarkable capacity to understand direction of travel”!



That is how some passengers kept quiet. I kept on talking, especially after we reached Choma in the hope that if we turned atthat point, we woudl not wast more time. I talked because I could not get off the bus at undesigned stations, so the only solution was to appeal to the driver to change course. I explained that it would be an act of extreme irresponsibility on my part as an active passenger to wait until the bus has reached Livingstone before holding the driver to account about the direction of travel. That is why I tried to warn the driver that we were headed in the wrong direction. Unfortunately, other passengers said we should just sit back comfortably, enjoy the ride which included some morsels of food delivered by the bus, and trust the driver because other drivers before him were much worse.



In the end, we arrived in Livingstone, our undesired destination. Just when we were arriving, we saw another bus, loading passing from there directly to Nakonde. The driver, upon realising the cost of his failure to listen and the disappointment in the eyes of the passengers, urged everyone to sit down, promising that he would take us to Nakonde if we give him more time. With the exception of those who came from the driver’s ethnic group and the auxiliary ones, most passengers, who had shown great faith in his driving skills by paying (voting) the fare for the bus as their mode of transport from Intercity to Nakonde, have left the bus for the other. These include those who had adopted silence during the journey after realising that the driver, aided by the choir mentioned, was not a listening kind.

As I write this post, the alternative bus is almost full. The same passengers who accused those of us who, along the way, advised the driver to change course, of harbouring hatred for the driver are now wonder

3 COMMENTS

  1. Sorry but your hatred is evident from the tone of your articles. you do not have to say it. Secondly i am not from your so-called Zambezi region, I am from the region late Lungu claimed to come from. Thirdly I have a number of issues I do not agree with the president, but I can assure those brutal corrupt magicians will not lower the cost of living if they were to come in. In no uncertain terms there is no alternative to HH. When i listen to campaign messages, I here nothing that they want to do. changing government to bring in a brutal corrupt group will be a repeat disaster for Zambia.

  2. This schizoid characteristic being consistently displayed by Dokota Shuwa Shuwa, doing something (in this case hating HH to the point of losing sleep and writing 50 page diatribes every few days). And in the same breathe vehemently denying the same is diagnostic of a clinical mental challenge. This is clear pathological hatred and obsession with a particular individual that in the spiritual realm is nothing less than demonic.

    Dokota Shuwa Shuwa actually thinks he is generating his own thoughts. When if fact they originate from the one designated in scripture as “the accuser of the brethren” whose sworn agenda is to not merely make the lives of people miserable, but ultimately to destroy lives.

    By shamelessly opposing everything HH does, Dokota Shuwa Shuwa has documented himself as the enemy of the progress, the life changing difference that HH has made in the lives of thousands, sorry millions of Zambian citizens. From free education, renegotiating the kaloba that PF thieves abandoned after defaulting TWICE on repayments, meal allowances for higher education student, meals for primary and secondary schools, reopening of several key copper mines (one of which was actually liquidated with the liquidator helping himself to the proceeds thereof), reopening of NCZ and Mulungushi Textiles, taking national reserves to an all time high, and diversifying power production towards solar from hydro. And the creation of thousands of jobs in the civil service and security wings.

    If Dokota Shuwa Shuwa was sincere in his criticism, as a world respected academic, he would initially seek audience or communicate his concerns privately. Only when the private avenue has been exhausted would he then go to social media and even mention that private consultation over his concerns was carried out. And rejected. That is what responsible leadership does. What Dokota Shuwa Shuwa is currently doing is equivalent to the mindless rebellion of a teenager who has just discovered the inebriating effects of alcohol.

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