90 Days To Stop The Coup On Zimbabwe’s Constitution

Dear Family and Friends,

Zimbabwe finally woke up this week. Voices were raised, meetings were held and Press Conferences convened. “We will die for this Constitution,” was the phrase we heard and we knew, at last, that the voices of opposition were back. Leadership was back. Here’s what happened:

 After months of speculation, anxiety and disbelief that they would actually do it, Zimbabwe’s Zanu PF government this week took us into a dark place we didn’t think they’d go to. The illusion that they have been so busy trying to create that everything is fine in Zimbabwe has suddenly been exposed for all to see. Despite their massaged statistics, shiny shopping malls, huge mansions and palm tree lined highways, everything is not fine at all in Zimbabwe, if it was why would they be about to change the country’s twelve-year-old Constitution to give themselves more power and longer terms in office?

On the 16th of February, following a cabinet meeting chaired by President Mnangagwa a few days earlier, the government announced that The Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment Bill (No 3) 2026, had been published in an Extraordinary Government Gazette which now formally starts a 90-day public consultation period before it goes to Parliament.  

The Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment Bill (No 3) proposes that the President will no longer be elected by the people of Zimbabwe but instead be chosen by the members of parliament. It proposes that the Presidential term of office will be extended from 5 to 7 years and that extension will apply to both the current President and to all the Members of Parliament. The next general election would be pushed from 2028 to 2030. The Constitution amendments also give the President the power to appoint 10 more Senators, removes the public interview process for judicial appointments and removes the voter’s roll from the electoral commission to the Registrar General’s office.

Zimbabwe’s current Constitution was adopted after a national referendum was held 12 years ago in March 2013. That Referendum was endorsed by all the major political parties and 94.5% of Zimbabweans voted in support of it. The likelihood of The Constitutional Amendment Bill (No 3) going to a referendum is apparently remote. Lawyer and opposition politician David Coltart said: “Any amendment which has the ‘effect’ of extending an incumbent’s tenure should be subjected to a referendum. They know that if that happens, they will fail, so they will do all in their power to prevent a referendum from happening.”

Tendai Biti, lawyer, former MP and Minister of Finance, has launched the CDF (Constitutional Defenders Forum), ‘a civic organization to defend and protect the Constitution.’ Mr Biti held a press conference this week, the likes of which we have not seen for many years. Mr Biti said: “we are going to work with everyone in the fight to protect this Constitution…. All hands must be on the deck. …. We are going to work together to stop this coup on our Constitution. … We will die for this Constitution. We will be arrested for this Constitution. … They must kill us, they must arrest us but this Constitutional Amendment will not pass.”

For so long we had thought we only had to survive two more years of this government; two more years of hospitals without medicine; two more years of food we cannot afford to buy; two more years of out of control corruption, two more years of illegal gold mining on hills and in rivers rubber stamped by government officials; two more years of carrying water home in buckets because taps are dry and the list goes on and on. An hour before sending this letter out today I bought an extra loaf of bread in the supermarket to give to the old man sitting outside in a wheelchair under a grey sky with a thin drizzle of rain coming down on him. You know how you know when people are hungry when you see them start eating the bread straight out the bag, then and there.

My heart is sore today. This is the Zimbabwe the present government have given us, we have got poorer and poorer while they have become multi-millionaires.

Zimbabwe has 90 days to stop this coup on our Constitution. Dark days lie ahead. Please watch, listen and share this news and keep Zimbabwe in your hearts and minds.

There is no charge for this Letter From Zimbabwe but if you would like to support my work and donate please visit my website.

Until next time, thanks for reading this Letter From Zimbabwe now in its 26th year, and my books about life in Zimbabwe, a country in waiting.

Ndini shamwari yenyu (I am your friend)

Love Cathy 19th February 2026. Copyright © Cathy Buckle  https://cathybuckle.co.zw/ 

My new Photobook “Zimbabwe’s Timeless Beauty The 2025 Collection” and my Beautiful Zimbabwe 2026 Calendar are now available.  All my Books, Photobooks and Calendars can be ordered from my website or from my publishers LULU. Click here to order www.lulu.com/spotlight/cathybuckle2018