Msipa opens lid on Gukurahundi

via Msipa opens lid on Gukurahundi – DailyNews Live 27 November 2015 by Fungi Kwaramba

HARARE – Respected Zanu PF elder, Cephas Msipa, has penned a book that could set the cat among the pigeons within government circles as it spotlights on democracy deficiencies in the country and how authorities did little as an estimated 20 000 innocent people, mainly in Matabeleland and the The book, titled In Pursuit of Freedom and Justice — A Memoir, dismisses the official massaging of narratives on the Gukurahundi atrocities as “a moment of madness”, saying as the massacres happened over a period spanning more than five years, they cannot therefore be described as such.

Querying the reasons why the government had deployed the military in the western regions of the country then, Msipa also asks why it was “necessary for North Korea to train this army (5th Brigade)” in the first place, adding almost despairingly that “only God Knows”.

“Innocent men, women and children perished in their thousands. They were accused of either harbouring dissidents or supporting them. It turned out to be a massacre of people perceived to be PF Zapu supporters.

“The fact that the people were Ndebele-speakers was regarded as sufficient proof that they were PF Zapu supporters and therefore dissident supporters,” reads part of the book.

He also described the statement that the massacres were “a moment of madness” — which is attributed to President Robert Mugabe — as absurd, adding that three decades after Gukurahundi was launched, it still raised “more questions than answers”.

In one of the strongest condemnations of one of the darkest periods in the history of post-independent Zimbabwe, Msipa — who fondly refers to Mugabe as his muzukuru (nephew), and helped broker the unity accord of 1987 that ended hostilities between Zanu and Zapu — described the killings as “gruesome”, calling on authorities “to look into the aftermath of Gukurahundi.”

“Gukurahundi was not a day’s event or a ‘moment of madness’. It began in 1981 and continued until 1987 when the unity accord was signed.

“There were meetings at which the matter was raised in my presence, and Mugabe insisted that the matter be discussed so he could learn more about what had happened and was still happening.

“The question is why did he not know what was happening when it was in the media and many human rights organisations and churches were publicly protesting (about it),” Msipa writes.

He also claims in the book that as early as 1960, Mugabe was already keen on establishing a one party state in the country.

“Mugabe supported the idea of a one-party state back then, but he did not speak much about his personal experiences in Ghana. It was as if something had gone wrong while he was in Ghana, which he did not want to disclose,” Msipa said.

Despite the two men enjoying a decades-long friendship, Msipa was fired from Mugabe’s cabinet during the Gukurahundi era and placed under house arrest, something he says still puzzles him up to this day.

A man of steadfast principles and strong convictions, Msipa also says in the book that when Zanu split from Zapu in the early 1960s, he was allegedly approached by Mugabe to desert Nkomo, but refused.

“When the split occurred, Mugabe had approached me and asked if I would join Zanu. I told him I would not because I did not trust Ndabaningi Sithole. He then said to me, ‘I hope this will not affect our relationship’.

“Why should it?’ I replied, and indeed it in no way affected our friendship, which continues up to now. He remains my ‘Muzukuru’ and I remain his ‘Sekuru’”.

Msipa also touches on the disputed 2008 elections in his book and says it was during the presidential run-off elections where the “army was active” that he had decided to end his illustrious political career, as he had been appalled by the army’s involvement in the elections.

“At one election meeting, in chief Mazvihwa’s area in Zvishavane, I was surprised to find myself sharing a platform with army commanders.

“I kept asking myself, ‘is this the freedom we fought for?’ … it was there that I made up my mind that I would never again participate in elections where people were openly threatened and intimidated into voting for any political party,” Msipa said.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 13
  • comment-avatar
    pidigori 8 years ago

    What an appetising abstract, can’t wait for the serialized excerpts of the book, bring it on please….!

  • comment-avatar
    IAN SMITH 8 years ago

    This was genocide.
    Mugabe belongs in prison

  • comment-avatar
    Qaqaqa 8 years ago

    Thats where he belongs at the moment.

  • comment-avatar
    John Maduka Moyo 8 years ago

    The truth always come. Gukurahundi to those who does not know was really massacre in Matebeleland and Midlands. I was at school by then if a person young and old could not attend ZANU PF musangano you were taken as if you are harbouring dissidents. Thoi Thoi in lower Gweru, Shurugwi, Matebeleland and surrounding areas. Tamirira one party state one of the songs used in musangano and down with Joshua Nkhomo and his followers. Time of madness as what BOB says. That was time of bloody in Zimbabwe. Who forgets those times and forgive is the one who was not affected.

    • comment-avatar
      Ndonga 8 years ago

      I and mine will never forget the suffering and the deaths…nor will we forgive…we will only be happy when Grace is pushing Mugabe into a box…not a wheelchair…

  • comment-avatar

    I wonder what brings on this sudden attack of conscience in Cephas Msipa?

  • comment-avatar
    mandevu 8 years ago

    All of Zanu PF will rot in jail. We will never forget what they did

  • comment-avatar
    Chomi 8 years ago

    I will buy a copy

  • comment-avatar

    I want a copy of this one

  • comment-avatar
    Barry Groulx 8 years ago

    Where is it available from?

  • comment-avatar
    Mazano Rewayi 8 years ago

    Gukurahundi is important because it happened after independence and therefore inexcusable. Otherwise, the whole liberation war after Chitepo’s death in 1975 must be investigated. In that period Zanla forces killed so many “vatengesi” whose only crimes were either to hold a different opinion or to question the actions of the “comrades”. Many middle class people – government workers, teachers, general dealers, successful communal farmers, priests, etc, lost their lives Pol Pot style. This is why rural folk are so afraid – it’s not Smith they are afraid of (he is long dead anyway), it is the memory of the atrocities perpetrated by the current leadership that they do not wish to revisit.

  • comment-avatar
    mbalo 8 years ago

    is the book available by now and where can i get one i want to read it before mugabe dies