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North
Korea's soccer team brings bad memories
IRIN
News
April
12, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=88789
Zimbabwe's plan to host
a North Korean soccer side for the June 2010 FIFA World Cup in neighbouring
South Africa is rekindling memories of the Matabeleland massacres
in the 1980s, amid a current climate of political intolerance.
Soon after independence
from Britain in 1980, President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF launched
Operation Gukhurundi - a Shona phrase for "the early rain which
washes away the chaff before the spring rains" - on the pretext
of tackling insurgents and counter-revolutionaries sponsored by
apartheid South Africa.
He unleashed the Zimbabwean
army's North Korean-trained 5th Brigade in the provinces of Matabeleland
North and South, and Midlands in southwestern Zimbabwe, strongholds
of the rival ZAPU party, led by Joshua Nkomo. More than 20,000 people
were killed in Operation Gukhurundi.
Now, the planned visit
by the soccer side is leading to a resurfacing of emotions and vows
of protests against the "unwanted visitors".
Political temperatures
have also been ratcheted up recently by disagreement within the
unity government, a fragile coalition between Mugabe's ZANU-PF,
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) and an MDC splinter party led by Deputy Prime Minister Arthur
Mutambura, over a new constitution.
ZANU-PF favours
the adoption of a constitution drafted ahead of the violent March
2008 elections, known as the Kariba
Draft, which concentrates power on an incumbent president, while
the MDC favours a people-driven constitution, and argues that such
a provision was made in the September 2008 Global
Political Agreement, which paved the way for the unity government
formed in February 2009.
Outreach teams have been
trained to gather and compile information from Zimbabweans about
what they expect in a new constitution, and will be deployed once
funding is available.
Tariro Makumbe, a member
of the MDC youth wing in the ZANU-PF rural stronghold of Muzarabani,
in Mashonaland Central Province, in the north, fled to the capital,
Harare, after her home was razed. She had objected to a ZANU-PF
aligned chief's decree that not everybody would be permitted to
contribute their views when the constitutional outreach team visited
the area.
Censoring
the constitution
"We were told that
only selected ZANU-PF officials, youth and war veterans would be
allowed to speak - anybody who spoke without authority would be
beaten up after the constitutional outreach teams had left,"
she told IRIN.
Those selected to speak
at the consultative meetings would favour the Kariba Draft, which
includes the position that the fast-track land reform process launched
in 2000 is irreversible, and that Zimbabwe will never again be a
colony.
In recent weeks ZANU-PF
and its youth wing has apparently launched Operation Hapana Anotaura
(Nobody Speaks) to allow only the views of Mugabe's ZANU-PF party
to be expressed to the constitution evaluation teams during meetings
in rural areas.
"We have it on good
authority that ZANU-PF has launched Operation Hapana Anotaura to
stop grassroots people from freely airing their views during the
constitutional outreach programme to be done by the Parliamentary
Select Committee," the Centre for Community Development in
Zimbabwe (CCDZ), an NGO working with traumatised communities, said
in a statement.
"CCDZ is working
in deeply polarised communities where Zimbabweans live in fear,
and violence and intimidation is a living reality that haunts them
on a daily basis," the statement said.
Elias Mudzuri, energy
minister in the unity government and organising secretary of Tsvangirai's
MDC, said he encountered increasing levels of political intolerance
while travelling recently to the opening of a clinic in the Mashonaland
Central Province.
"ZANU-PF youth militia
set up roadblocks and threatened villagers from attending the function.
We should not be allowing such acts of brutality to be taking place
in modern Zimbabwe. I shudder to imagine what villagers in the remote
parts of the country, who support the MDC, have to go through at
the hands of marauding ZANU-PF militia who take the law into their
hands at will."
Secretary-general of
the MDC's youth wing, Solomon Madzore, told IRIN his organization
was planning to visit rural areas to "conscientise" people,
so that they should actively and openly participate in the constitution-making
process.
"We want to remove
the element of fear by talking to our parents and the general populace
in the countryside," he said. "There is nothing illegal
about the constitution-making process, which is a product of the
inclusive [unity] government."
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