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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Bloody diamonds
John
Eppel
December 11, 2008
Abel Musundire
might have been the child narrator in Emmanuel Ngara's celebrated
poem on Nyadzonia, a Zimbabwean refugee camp in Mozambique, which
was wiped out by Rhodesian security forces at the height of the
Second Chimurenga. Both his parents and his older sister had been
killed, and it was only the shelter of his mother's body that
had saved his life. From that moment on - he was just four years
old - the thud-thudding of helicopter blades was branded on his
soul.
After the war
he had been reunited with his paternal relatives in Mutare. He grew
up in the peace and relative prosperity of the eighties and early
nineties. Following his A-Levels at Mutare Boys High, he studied
to be a school teacher at Hillside Teachers College in Bulawayo.
After graduation he was posted to Gwanda High School where he met
his future wife, Lindiwe and where, when the Zimbabwean economy
fell like a house of cards, he met the man who would lure him to
a premature death.
This man was
an Inspector in the Gwanda Criminal Investigation Department, and
a genuine war veteran with bitter memories of Nyadzonia and Chimoio,
where he had been wounded in the hip. He walked with a limp, which
he exploited in the manner of Long John Silver, to suggest aggressiveness.
He was indeed quite a student of literature, and it was he who had
introduced Abel to Ngara's poem by reciting it, one evening,
on the veranda of the Gwanda Hotel. It was uncanny how the poem
reawakened in Abel that terrible moment in 1976, the mangled remains
of his family and many, many other refugees. He recalled with a
shudder the rattle of choppers followed by bursts of machine gun
fire. The inspector dictated the poem to him and he learned to declaim
to his Commerce classes the opening stanzas:
We saw
the soldiers come.
They came from the setting of the sun.
They came with armaments.
They came with fury.
They came painted like black people.
But soon
we got to know,
Soon we got to know who they were,
Soon - the whole earth was athunder with bomb blasts,
Soon the whole earth was aflame with furious and frightening fire.
The fact that
he had actually been present at the massacre impressed his pupils
no end and they looked upon him with a new respect, not least the
dreamy-eyed Lindiwe in his O-Level class.
Abel was earning
the equivalent of $8 US a month, supporting a wife and four children,
when the Inspector took him by the elbow and guided him to the Gwanda
Hotel where he was treated to a fizzy drink - his first in two years.
The Inspector wanted to have a heart-to-heart talk with his friend.
Had he heard of Marange? Abel thought he had. After all, it was
home territory for Abel, not far from Mutare. Wasn't that
where diamonds are scattered on the ground like flying-ant wings?
The inspector
offered Abel a job on behalf of the wife of a cabinet minister,
one of the most powerful men in the land, as a makorokoza or digger.
The inspector was a gweja or dealer, who sold the diamonds in South
Africa to connections in the ANC, friends of the minister's
wife. The law wouldn't bother them because, isn't it?
- they had the wife's protection. He dug in a pocket of his
jacket and brought out a handful of milky pebbles. They made tiny
musical clicks when he shook them under Abel's nose. There's
a Toyota Land Cruiser, a plasma screen television, and enough left
over to educate your children at the most expensive private schools
in Harare. Abel moved to touch the diamonds but the Inspector returned
them to his pocket.
Abel was to
work with two other diggers who had already been operating in the
alluvial diamond fields in the Chiadzwa area of Marange District.
They were quite close to the Mozambique border. Most of the poorer
quality surface diamonds had long gone so Abel was issued with a
mugwara or iron bar to dig for the larger, more precious underground
diamonds, which, processed, would find their way, eventually, to
wherever rich bitches and their terminal husbands didn't pay
taxes, and left their fortunes to Maltese poodles. Abel's
fellow diggers were also school teachers, both from Harare. They
warned Abel not get his hopes up. They didn't get to keep
the diamonds they found, and they weren't paid very much,
but at least it was in foreign currency; at least they could make
ends meet. Abel wanted to have a word with the Inspector who had
promised him so much, but it was too late.
Too late -
the saddest words in the world. De Beers, the original owners of
the field, had allowed their claim to lapse, and it had been taken
over by a British company called African Consolidated Resources.
When it became clear, however, that there were rich pickings to
be had, the government sent in the police to evict the foreign owners.
That was in 2007. What followed was a free-for-all, a gift to the
hungry peasants of Marange District from their ancestral spirits.
A few of them actually got rich by Zimbabwean standards. But, bless
them, the poor are not meant to get rich; they will have their reward
in heaven. So in came the wheeler-dealers; then came the political
heavyweights in ZANU-PF; then, and this is what spelled doom for
the likes of Abel Musundire - then came JOC and Operation Hakudzokwi
or No Return.
Abel's
first night in Chiadzwa was his last. They were busy filling bags
of diamond infested soil from their trench, when Abel's ears
picked up a familiar sound - the rhythmic thud of a helicopter gunship
belonging to the Airforce of Zimbabwe. He screamed to his companions
to run but it was too late. Those diggers who were not mown down
by machine gun fire were caught in an ambush of policemen and their
vicious dogs. While the latter tore them to pieces, the former went
through their pockets looking for stones and hard cash. Abel was
lucky enough to be killed by the gunner in the helicopter, and he
died with sound of its blades thudding overhead.
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