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Is It Time to Break All Bonds of Fellowship?

We are currently standing in the long shadow of history. As we move through 2026, we find ourselves just a few years away from the 100th anniversary of the Great Depression (1929–2029). It’s a sobering milestone that forces us to look at the cracks in our current global foundation and ask: Are we about to repeat the same mistakes, or are we capable of a radical redesign?

The phrase “breaking all bonds of fellowship” sounds like the prologue to a dark ages revival. But in a world where old alliances are fraying, it might be time to stop mourning the “old way” of doing things and start building something that actually fits the 21st century.


The Transatlantic Wobble: US-EU Relations on the Brink

For decades, the US-EU alliance was the bedrock of global stability. Today, that bedrock is looking more like shifting sand. Relations are currently under exceptional strain, with many analysts suggesting the partnership is on the brink of collapse.

Between transactional bargaining, tariff threats, and a growing European desire for “strategic autonomy,” the “special relationship” is in marriage counseling, and the sessions aren’t going well. Europe is realizing it can no longer outsource its security and economic certainty to a partner whose domestic politics are increasingly unpredictable.

The Ghost of Isolationism

This isn’t the first time the United States has flirted with pulling back the curtains and locking the front door. The U.S. tried the isolationist policy before, most notably during the interwar period.

The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 serves as a grim reminder of what happens when major powers treat global interdependence as a nuisance. It didn’t protect the American economy; it deepened the global agony. However, we have to acknowledge a hard truth: it is a different world from 100 years ago. A century ago, “going it alone” was a choice; today, with our hyper-integrated supply chains, cyber-dependencies, and shared climate risks, “isolationism” is less of a policy and more of a slow-motion economic suicide pact.


Alliances Still Matter—But They Need to Shift Shape

If the old bonds are breaking, we shouldn’t try to scotch-tape them back together. We need to reshape them. The alliances of the future shouldn’t be based on “big brother” dynamics or cold-war relics. They need to be:

  • Reciprocal: No more one-way dependencies.
  • Resilient: Built to survive political mood swings in any one capital.
  • Localized: Focused on regional strengths and mutual growth.

“If ‘fellowship’ means blind loyalty and one-sided expectations, then yes, it deserves to be broken. But if it means shared problem-solving, then we don’t need fewer allies—we need better-structured ones.”


The Europe-Africa Pivot: From Empire to Equal Partnership

Perhaps the most significant “shift” available is the relationship between Europe and Africa.

A hundred years ago, there was a “fellowship” of sorts between these two continents, but let’s be honest: it was built on empirist principles, extraction, and colonial hierarchy. It wasn’t an alliance; it was an occupation.

Today, the opportunity is entirely different. As the transatlantic link wobbles, the bridge between Europe and Africa must be strengthened—but this time, on equal, mutually beneficial terms.

Beyond Slogans: Real Trade and Skills Exchange

A modern Europe-Africa alliance isn’t about “aid”; it’s about rational statecraft.

  • Trade: Europe needs diversified supply chains; Africa needs industrial capacity and infrastructure investment that respects sovereignty.
  • Skills Exchange: Europe faces demographic aging, while Africa possesses a massive, talented youth population. If managed through safe, legal, and reciprocal pathways, this is a win-win for global innovation.

The Cultural Bridge: Speaking the Same Language

For too long, the cultural exchange has been a one-way street. Africans already share many European cultures and languages through history and education. To reach true “equal terms,” Europe must be prepared to meet Africa halfway.

It is time for European diplomatic and commercial institutions to treat major African languages like Zulu, Swahili, and Hausa with the same strategic importance as Mandarin or Spanish. Learning these languages isn’t just a polite gesture; it’s a serious investment in building trust and accessing some of the world’s fastest-growing markets.


The Verdict

We don’t need to break all bonds of fellowship. We just need to break the ones that no longer serve the reality of 2026. By moving away from the “paternalistic” models of the past and toward a multilateral, reciprocal partnership between Europe and Africa, we might just find the stability that the old world is currently losing.

The next decade will reward those who can redesign their alliances before the old ones finish collapsing. The next decade will reward blocs and regions that can:

  1. reduce single-point dependencies,
  2. build credible regional capacity,
  3. treat partnerships as two-way value creation,
  4. keep channels open even when politics gets loud.

In that world, a strengthened Europe–Africa alliance—built deliberately on mutual benefit rather than imperial memory, may be one of the most strategically sensible “new shapes” of fellowship available.


“As long as the police carry out the will of the leadership, it is acting legally”.

2012 has definitely not put its best foot forward as has been characteristic of all election years in Zimbabwe in the past 3 decades of independence. Recent events of violence by some unscrupulous members of the police force in Nkayi and other areas, which have been synonymous with election years in those areas, have degraded the status of the once elite force in the region to the ranks of the notorious NAZI Geheime Staatspolizei, commonly known as Gestapo (Secret State Police). Our police have become so partisan in the Zimbabwean securitised politics that even the top ranking military and police officers openly reiterate that they will never accept a President who did not fight in the liberation struggle.
In the Gestapo fashion, the Zimbabwean police have the carte blanche to be the judge, jury and executioner; they operate without judicial oversight in intimidating and crushing citizens accused of being sympathetic to the opposition. And, as Werner Best, the onetime head of legal affairs in the Gestapo once pointed out, the police are there to serve the will of the leadership and not the people. Commenting on the incident, Co-Minister of Home Affairs, Theressa Makone promised to do all she can in her “limited powers” to ensure order and peace in Zimbabwe. Limited powers? The poor half minister has no powers at all. This is made apparent by the fact that after every such illegal behaviour by the police she has to seek audience with the Police commissioner who has always vowed that her President will never be the country’s President as long as he is still Police Commissioner. If MDC is in government with the mandate from the majority of Zimbabweans why do they come and tell us they are powerless to control their portfolios? This also begs the question, “Who controls the police?” The position of the opposition in the coalition is very unenviable. It has dismally failed to represent and fight for the rights of the people. It is fighting for more “power”, as the co-minister of Home Affairs stated. It is no wonder the majority of Zimbabweans felt relief at the resuscitation of ZAPU, the author of the true liberation of Zimbabweans
As if the harassment people face in the hands of the police was not enough, rainfall this season is also erratic. Poor harvests and the corollary food hand outs have persistently been exploited by the corrupt leadership to twist the hand of the populace during election years. They have branded their shameless blackmail, campaigning. Areas controlled or inclined towards the opposition and other moderate regions are made to suffer in the distribution of donor food. What nation holds its own citizens to ransom?
Zimbabwe’s failure to value its most important resource, people, has thrown the country into a severe crisis in the past 3 decades; a crisis which has seen the once vibrant and dynamic society and economy virtually collapsing as political instability, lawlessness, misgovernment and a relentless economic meltdown transformed this erstwhile leading southern African nation into a proverbial basket case. Lack of decisive action by the Southern African regional body is surprising given the extent of the Zimbabwean crisis repercussions on the region. Zimbabweans do not feel free in their own country which has forced the majority of them to leave the country to neighbouring nations. Those with resources have even gone further abroad to the countries against which we fought for liberation; what a disappointment.
Elections in Zimbabwe have never been perceived to be free and fair since they are always characterised by state-sponsored violence and vote-rigging. This has resulted in high voter apathy and frustration. As Zimbabweans we want to return to our own nation. Our hopes for a completely free and stable Zimbabwe now rest with ZAPU. We encourage all professionals and ordinary Zimbabwean who decided to vote with their feet and leave the country to go and register to vote. Only the ballot will determine the future of Zimbabwe.