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"It
Is Unlawful to Speak the Truth"
Tonderai
Kwidini, IPS News
July 16, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=38550
"If I am going to
change anything in my script it will be punctuation marks. I am
not changing anything else,'' said Cont Mhlanga, a prominent
Zimbabwean playwright and founder of Bulawayo-based Amakhosi Theatre
Production House. He was responding to the banning of his play entitled
‘‘The Good President''.
Mhlanga is the latest
victim of the crackdown by President Robert Mugabe's government
on perceived enemies of the state in the arts world. Plays such
as ‘‘Heaven's Diary'' and Mhlanga's
‘‘Super Patriots and Morons'' have been
banned in the past few years.
‘‘The
Good President'' chronicles political and social events
since Zimbabwe became independent in 1980. It pays particular attention
to the period just after independence, which is commonly referred
to as ‘‘the dark era''.
This was the time when
the Matabeleland massacre took place during an operation code-named
‘‘Gukurahundi''. An estimated 20,000 people
were murdered in the slaughter carried out mainly in the southern
parts of Zimbabwe which supported then-opposition leader Joshua
Nkomo.
The play revisits these
events, building up to the present day with an emphasis on how the
country has been governed.
It stirred controversy
when it premiered at the Theatre in the Park in Harare recently,
attracting large crowds and provoking debate on what has happened
in the country. The state media, which reflects government thinking,
did not waste time in dismissing the play as the work of enemies
of the state seeking regime change.
According to a synopsis
of the play, ‘‘The Good President'' explores
the institution of leadership in the broader socio-political context.
Using his masterful skills as playwright, Mhlanga explores recent
political events such as the beatings of political and civic leaders
such as Morgan Tsvangirai to illustrate Mugabe's leadership.
Tsvangirai is the leader
of Zimbabwe's main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC).
‘‘It is a
play for everyone but deliberately targeted at the political leadership
as the brick and mortar that binds society together. As typical
satire the play employs humour, ridicule, irony and exaggeration
to criticize the bad aspects of society in dramatic style. The writer's
assertion is that there is a no more vicious way of killing humanity
than failing to respect and defend the institution of leadership,''
according to the synopsis.
The government dismissed
the play as the work of political activists masquerading as artists.
‘‘The play is not of any national value. It seeks to
stir emotions and hate with the ulterior motive to see President
Mugabe out of power. It undermines the person of the president,''
said Deputy Minister of Information and Publicity Bright Matonga.
Mhlanga denies this:
‘‘It is not part of our African culture to beat a popularly
elected leader and then to display the images for the young ones
to see.''
Despite the attack on
the play, he remains defiant. ‘‘I will not rewrite the
play. How can a play based on true historical events and incidents
and on knowledge in the public domain be unlawful? I did not base
my creativity on fictitious events and incidents,''
he said according to a statement.
‘‘It seems
what is unlawful in this country is to speak the truth, even if
all the facts are there for everybody to see,'' he said.
‘‘Self-expression is a human right that no one, not
even the state, has the right to take away.
‘‘In my view
there is nothing flowery and poetic about the current situation
in Zimbabwe. There is nothing flowery and poetic about a political
leadership that celebrates state violence. There is nothing flowery
and poetic about millions of people in the country who cannot afford
to put a single decent meal on the table for their families.
‘‘There is
nothing poetic and flowery about an economy of which the inflation
is heading towards 5,000 percent,'' Mhlanga insisted.
With public protests,
gatherings and a once-vibrant media shut down, theatre is one of
the last channels through which people can voice their anger against
the increasingly unpopular government.
‘‘The Good
President'' had a good run in Harare where it was performed
for two weeks. According to the producers, the leaders of the dreaded
Zimbabwe secret service attended but did not attempt to ban it.
It was however banned
last month before a performance in Zimbabwe's second largest
city of Bulawayo. Mhlanga and the producers of the play, Rooftop
Promotions, launched a High Court appeal against the ban which was
dismissed. They were ordered to seek an out of court settlement
with the police.
They have decided to
launch another High Court appeal, this time in Harare.
‘‘We are
going to challenge the High Court decision made by the Bulawayo-based
judge because we feel it is tantamount to denying us our freedom
of expression. We do not see the play as undermining or as seeking
to denigrate President Mugabe. We are not going to be intimidated
and we will continue writing, producing and staging political satires,
come rain or thunder,'' said Daves Guzha, the producer
of ‘‘The Good President''.
Mhlanga is not new to
controversy. He had a run-in with the police when he was locked
up and interrogated last year over his political satire, ‘‘Pregnant
with Emotion''. The play was about a child who refused
to be born, fearing that he or she will not be able to cope with
the crisis prevailing in Zimbabwe.
Mhlanga's latest
play joins a long list of theatre productions which have been deemed
to be undesirable by the government's Censorship Board which
is still using laws dating from the era of the white regime, such
as the Censorship and Control Act of 1967.
Among some
of the plays that have been censored by the government are ‘‘Super
Patriots and Morons'', which was banned three years
ago, ‘‘State of the Nation'' and ‘‘All
Systems out of Order''. ‘‘We are witnessing
a systematic attack on theatre as an alternative voice,''
said Guzha.
Meanwhile the Censorship
Board is considering banning yet another play which is highly critical
of the government. The play is entitled ‘‘Decades of
Terror''. It talks about how the government has presided
over the country in a ‘‘ruinous manner''
since independence.
Although the play successfully
premiered in Harare three weeks ago, it was yet to receive a certificate
from the Censorship Board to clear it for public performances.
‘‘We have
applied for a certificate from the Censorship Board but they are
taking their time to process our papers. We gave them everything
that they requested, the scripts and all our plans with the play
but they have not come back to us and we are getting worried,''
said Daniel Maphosa, the writer of the play and the director of
Savanna Trust which will supervise public performances of the play.
‘‘We are
just hoping that the play will not get into the same situation as
‘The Good President' and get censored. But if that happens
we are still determined to go ahead and stage the play without the
blessings of the Censorship Board.''
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