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Murdered:
the war veteran who stood up to Mugabe
Tracy McVeigh, The Observer (UK)
May 18, 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/may/18/zimbabwe?gusrc=rss&feed=worldnews
Gibson Nyandoro told
The Observer of his disillusionment with the regime. Now he is dead,
a victim of new violence as Zimbabwe faces an election rerun.
When Gibson Nyandoro
raised his arm and slowly unclenched his fist to make the open-palmed
salute of Zimbabwe's opposition at a rally eight weeks ago, it was
a moment so loaded with symbolism that it stilled the crowd. Only
days before the presidential election, the gesture by this 53-year-old
war veteran and former government supporter reflected a nation's
rising defiance of President Robert Mugabe and the growing hope
that a change of regime was really coming, and with it a path back
to prosperity and freedom. This weekend Nyandoro's body lies rotting
somewhere near the army barracks where he was taken and tortured
to death. His friends and family, and his fellow political campaigners,
are all too scared to collect it for fear of a trap that might cost
them their lives. Nyandoro's story is the story of his country -
he fought for its freedom in the independence struggle, he backed
Mugabe's ruling party, Zanu PF, acting as his henchman, one of the
feared 'war vets' who seized white-owned farms, beating and sometimes
killing anyone who got in their way.
He told The Observer
of how he regretted his violent past. 'People were very, very afraid,'
he said. And how he had come to see that Mugabe had betrayed Zimbabwe
and brought people not land but starvation. Now, he said, he wanted
change. The remarkable bravery of that public salute in March, watched
by The Observer, was quashed in the most brutal way by the militias
of Mugabe, the president Nyandoro had fought for. They came for
Nyandoro on 2 May as he sat at one of the long tables of the Zimunhu
Bar in Epworth, 15 miles from Harare, chatting with old comrades
about football and politics. Sungura music was playing, a fast beat
danced with fast moving feet to imitate horses' hooves, and the
drinkers were making their glasses of sour white beer made of sorghum
last. Around 15 men, some in uniforms, arrived in cars, poured into
the bar, smashing out with long iron bars before taking Nyandoro
away.
A political 'cleansing'
campaign in Zimbabwe is escalating fast. For the five weeks it took
the electoral commission of Zimbabwe to announce the disputed results
of the 29 March presidential vote there was an uneasy, but mostly
peaceful, calm as everyone waited out the unexplained delay. When
it finally came, it was claimed Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the
Movement for Democratic Change, had beaten Mugabe - but only marginally,
not by enough to prevent a second round. With that run-off election
now set for 27 June, there is mounting evidence that the political
violence against anyone who supported the MDC is increasing by the
day as Mugabe and his Zanu PF party supporters work hard to ensure
that far fewer voters dare to defy them at the polling stations
this time. The body of Emmanuel Nelson, 30, has also not yet been
returned to his family - he leaves a mother, a wife and a three-year-old
daughter. He was taken from his home at Hopely Farm, a poor scrabble
of half-built breeze block homes outside Harare, after dark by four
men and bundled into a car. He was found last Monday, unconscious,
bleeding and dumped in the road. He was taken to hospital, where
he later died. He had been slashed in the face and stabbed in the
side with a screwdriver. Nelson's wife, Joice, sits outside their
home with her mother-in-law receiving the mourners, their faces
glazed with the shock of fresh grief. 'He was MDC and they say that
is why he was killed. But I don't understand. My daughter keeps
on asking and asking where he is. I have had to send her to a relative's
house because I cannot answer her,' she said.
Tsvangirai was
in Johannesburg last night, having delayed his return home for the
third time in as many weeks, saying there was evidence of an assassination
plot against him. He has been busying himself in Africa and Europe
trying to raise support and cash for his campaign. An MDC rally
planned for today in Bulawayo has been banned.
At least 32 people have been killed. Hundreds have been beaten and
tens of thousands have been intimidated into fleeing their homes.
Young men are slipping away to South Africa or Botswana. Last week
in Harvest House, the MDC's Harare offices, about 350 people were
clustered in the corridors and stairwells, many with fresh bandages
on wounds and broken limbs inflicted by soldiers and militias. Some
had come straight from hospital; all were too afraid to go outside
on to the streets or to go home. With the desperate food shortages,
unemployment and a lack of available cash in the country, MDC activists
are struggling to feed the influx of refugees, but they can and
do offer counseling for the traumatized and everywhere people huddle
and listen to one another's stories.
But it was the story
of Gibson Nyandoro that persuaded Batanai Muturu where his future
lay. 'He was my friend and now he is killed. He was a soldier and
they didn't care. He worked to help make people see that Mugabe
is a wrong man. Hundreds of people are being attacked now, all the
time. They take away MDC people's food and they go to funerals to
arrest others there. They were expecting people to vote for Zanu
PF and now comes the punishment. They are trying to get rid of all
these people. I don't think I will be in Epworth again.' 'This is
it,' he said, lifting up a battered sports bag. 'All I have now,
a few clothes.' He was leaving. 'I have no money for visas, so I
will jump the border. We're not secure. Any time we can be killed.'
Muturu reached South Africa last Wednesday. He joins more than three
million Zimbabweans now in exile. Shaking hands at the end of the
interview in March, Nyandoro spoke excitedly of his belief that
change would come to the blighted country for which he had fought
so many wars; he was going to persuade more war vets to join the
opposition. With great warmth he thanked The Observer 'for your
bravery in coming here to meet us'. The irony is Nyandoro had no
idea that it was his courage, the bravery of all Zimbabweans defying
Mugabe's regime that would cost him his life.
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