Gukurahundi: Renewal Team vows redress

via Gukurahundi: Renewal Team vows redress 07 July 2014

THE MDC Renewal Team has moved to revive discussion of the emotive 1980s Gukurahundi conflict, insisting victims of the killings must be compensated and those responsible for the atrocities made to account for their actions.

The sensitive subject has also come up a time a former British cabinet minister has revealed that the UK did not act to stop the excesses in its former colony because London did not want to be seen as “overreacting”.

Leaders of the Renewal Team, a breakaway group from the opposition MDC-T party, brought up the unresolved post-independence conflict while addressing a structures meeting in Bulawayo at the weekend.

“You don’t forget until you talk,” said the group’s interim chairperson, Samuel Sipepa Nkomo.

“You talk to people in Tsholotsho, Kezi … who had their relatives put in a hut which was locked and doused with paraffin before being set ablaze.  We can’t forget without talking. My own brother was killed by Gukurahundi. We can forgive, but will not forget.”

Rights groups say as many as 20,000 civilians, most supporters of the rival PF Zapu party, were killed when then Prime Minister Robert Mugabe deployed a North Korea-trained army unit to track down dissidents in the Matabeleland and Midlands regions.

The first commander the army unit, known as Five Brigade, was current Airforce of Zimbabwe chief, Perrence Shiri.

While the Tony Blair-led British government badgered South Africa to help facilitate a military invasion of Zimbabwe after Mugabe unleashed war veterans on white commercial farmers around 2000, with a handful of them killed, it has emerged the UK saw Gukurahundi in ‘the big picture’ and chose not to act.

The UK’s ‘hands off’ attitude is revealed in an article titled ‘The Origins and Functions of Demonisation Discourses in Britain–Zimbabwe Relations’ which was published in the Journal of Southern African Studies last week.

Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the Conservative government’s Africa Minister in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (1983–86) is quoated as saying “he (Mugabe) was the legitimately elected government, even if we did not approve of the bad things he was doing in Matabeleland. We had to be pragmatic.

“(again) most of what had happened before Matabeleland was very positive and we did not want to jeopardise that by overreacting. We recognised that there was always going to be an internal tension and hostility between ZAPU and ZANU, between Matabeleland and Mashonaland, and that was a part of the country’s dynamic.”

Sipepa Nkomo however, said lasting peace in Zimbabwe would always be at risk unless simmering anger over Gukurahundi was resolved through mechanisms such as a truth and reconciliation commission.

“People must be allowed to confess their sins and then we can find peace,” he said to thunderous applause from the audience.

Elton Mangoma added that a government led by the Renewal Team would ensure victims were compensated.

“When we form the next government, we want to look at the plight of victims in this country, starting with those of Gukurahundi,” said Mangoma.

“We will pay compensation for people who were killed, goats and cattle killed.  Where the children need to have school fees paid or medical expenses paid for victims, we will start helping them now as a party before we come into government.”

Mugabe has never apologised for the killings, only describing them as a moment of madness. The veteran leader and his Zanu PF party want the 1987 Unity Accord with PF Zapu to be the last word on the conflict.

You can read the article ‘The Origins and Functions of Demonisation Discourses in Britain–Zimbabwe Relations’ at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03057070.2014.933646#.U7EydU0U-JA

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 13
  • comment-avatar
    Madlinduna Xhosaboy 10 years ago

    Are these guys not being demagogues on this one,simple for a symbiotic point of entry in Matebeleland?Do we really need to start there prioritical.

  • comment-avatar
    Doctor do little 10 years ago

    The only retribution is the prosecution of the offenders. This was no war. This was genocide.

  • comment-avatar
    jobolinko 10 years ago

    there is nothing new here tsvangirai had promised to compensate gukurahundi victims if he had been voted president ,its old wine in a new bottle.

  • comment-avatar
    Petal 10 years ago

    Don’t think an internal organisation will help it needs an International Organisation to sort this thieving scumbags

  • comment-avatar
    thembani 10 years ago

    Reewal,you have my vote.

  • comment-avatar

    I agree the matter should be looked into, but to promise compensation however deserved, is a pipe dream as the country is completely bankrupt

  • comment-avatar
    nyoni 10 years ago

    The people want answers, i want answers and the world wants answers. This must not be swept under or else we will repeat this evil again. NO MORE COVER UPS BY ANYONE THERE MUST BE JUSTICE .

  • comment-avatar
    Tjingababili 10 years ago

    PLAYING WITH MATABELES EMOTIONS TO GET THEIR SUPPORT! RUBBISH!

  • comment-avatar
    Doctor do little 10 years ago

    The Ndebele people will get redress. That politicians come to Matebeland and make such statements and their promises leaves a bit of a sour taste as these same guys were in Government and were silent during their tenure. You would see any sensible Politician campaigning about the way Bulawayo, and Matebeleland at large have not been on anybody’s economic agenda since Independence. Bulawayo the Capital of Matebeleland has slowly but surely stripped of it’s Industrial base which was the best in Southern Africa. Tell us about bringing water to Bulawayo. Tell us about opening the factories that now lie bare. Tell us about creating employment for the suffering Bulawayo population. As far as the 80,s Mugabes Government wanted to move the NRZ Headquarters from Bulawayo to Harare. It was not possible because of logistic inadequacies in Harare. They even tried to relocate the Trade fare to Babanbazonke. I would agree with the one that says people are playing with the emotions of people in this region. Win the election first. After that open up investigations into this crimes and prosecute even the ones that have since passed. As far as I know there is no “Status of Limitations” for Murder.

  • comment-avatar
    munzwa 10 years ago

    It must be debated however, as also the victims of political violence in the rest of the country, we all want closure on these issues, bob and his crew can not get away with these acts…

  • comment-avatar
    Doctor do little 10 years ago

    @munzwa you are absolutely correct. LEST WE FORGET ONE OF THE MANY ACTS COMMITTED.

    Posted on April 15, 2010 | Category: Politics; Business, Sport

    https://www.zimbabwesituation.com
    It is ten years today, 15 April 2010, since my MDC colleagues Tichaona Chiminya and Talent Mabika were torched alive and burnt to death by a ZANU PF mob led by Joseph Mwale just outside Murambinda Growth point in Buhera in 2000 .The perpetrators of this ignomorous callous act remain free with Joseph Mwale still drawing a wage officially as a government employee. Such is the classical impunity enjoyed by ZANU PF agents which has become its legacy.

  • comment-avatar
    gogo sesikhona sizokulanda 10 years ago

    The Rwanda style will soon visit Zimbabwe. That is a fact. You can dream, sing or dance with supreme praises but that moment will come. These guys have the nerve to come and promise people things beyond their reach and means.

  • comment-avatar
    Straight Shooter 10 years ago

    The only way to sort out Zim’s problems is to start from scratch. All those oin power now should step aside; the army, the airforce, the CIO and the police be dismantled and new organisation be set up and new leadership appointed. A new constitution be drafted and new laws be drawn up. New institutions of demovracry be established and a new governmental system of a federal state be established.

    Well – obviously this will never come to pass; because the guilty are afraid. Zimbabwe is doomed – nothing will ever come right in that country. There are too many guilty people!