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PM's Heroes and Defence Forces message
Prime
Minister, Morgan Tsvangirai
August 07, 2011
My Fellow Zimbabweans
Today is that important day in the year when we
celebrate and remember the selfless dedication of our heroes and
heroines in the long and tortuous history of tour great nation.
The most known heroes of this country are those
who waged the protracted liberation war that led to the independence
of Zimbabwe from 1890 to 1980.
They included men, women and the youth, some of
whom lost life and limb so that our national aspiration for true
freedom, independence and dignity could live again.
Yet there were others before them. Mbuya Nheanda,
Sekuru Kaguvi and Chaminuka are spiritual icons who will forever
remain etched in our collective memory as the beginners of the long
struggle to unshackle colonial rule. But it was the second Chimurenga
that brought our independence when dedicated sons and daughters
of this land among them Joshua Nkomo, Herbert Wiltshire Chitepo,
Mayor Urimbo, Edgar Tekere, Ndabaningi Sithole, Sheba Tavarwisa,
Vitalis Zvinavashe and many others took up the gun and waged a war
that brought our hard won independence.
Many other heroes and heroines lie in the loamy
soils of Zimbabwe in disused mine shafts and in mass graves inside
and outside the country.
Their blood is testimony to the great sacrifices
that the heroic people of Zimbabwe paid to their quest to attain
freedom.
There are others still living who are in Government,
including serving and retired officers in our venerable security
institutions who fought selflessly so that this great country could
enjoy the fruits of independence.
But there are also millions of unsung heroes and
heroines of our painful national story; the ordinary men and women
in places such as Nkayi, Bubi, Mandidzudzure, Chimanimani, Muzarabani,
Mukumbura, Mudzi and Nyamaropa who fought our war of liberation.
These were ordinary villagers who played a pivotal
part in the attainment of independence.
They have received neither adequate compensation
nor recognition over the years.
They simply did it for the country and for future
generations. They simply did it so that every Zimbabwean could taste
the true essence of freedom and the return of collective national
dignity.
Yes they did it for Zimbabwe and all of its people;
regardless of race, colour, creed or political affiliation.
Today is a day when we salute those who fought and
continue to fight for democracy in the country in order to complete
the unfinished business of our liberation struggle so that ordinary
Zimbabweans can enjoy true freedom and prosperity.
Fellow Zimbabweans, it was never the original intention
of true revolutionaries to privatise this day and make it a party
event.
It is demeaning to the great sons and daughters
of this land; indeed an affront to their national contribution,
to give the impression that their sacrifice should be the narrow
and parochial possession of ZANU PF, the MDC, ZAPU or Mavambo.
So this great day cannot be privatised by any political
party.
Even the selection of our heroes and heroines must
not be the exclusive preserve of any political organisation. The
MDCs national council, the ZANU PF politburo or any organ of any
party cannot bastardise a great national day such as this one to
be a day of cheap rhetoric and sloganeering; a day of name-calling
and politicking. Today is a day of sober reflection and deep introspection
on whether we have achieved true independence and freedom.
If honourable
MPs are assaulted
in Parliament
and if ordinary Zimbabweans are brutally assaulted or even killed
for supporting a political party, we must think long and hard whether
this can be the legacy of true national heroes.
And true heroes transcend genre. Because heroes
are not just politicians. There are many Zimbabwean heroes in sport,
in business, in the social sector, in the arts and in the various
facets of our lives whose contribution needs national celebration.
So as we celebrate the sacrifice by our great heroes
and heroines, let us also remember that this is a national day whose
lustre and importance we can only erode the by making it a partisan
event and a day of cheap slogans and party T-shirts.
In the new Zimbabwe that I envision, Zimbabweans
from all walks of life must unite on a day like this to celebrate
the dead and living who have battled to give this great country
the dignity and the true freedom it deserves.
This day must be a day for unity and confluence;
a day when the whole national unites in celebrating those who fought
selflessly for the good of the country.
And on Tuesday, we celebrate Defence Forces Day.
In any country, the defence forces play an important role in safeguarding
the country and its citizens.
All Zimbabweans salute the positive and heroic acts
of our defence forces in bringing about our national independence.
It is true that most of the members of our defence
forces both retired and serving played a key part in the liberation
for this country.
But when they took up the gun, they did not do so
to liberate members of one political party. They did so to bring
freedom to every Zimbabwean regardless of race colour or creed.
Furthermore, our defence forces have been deployed
to several parts of the world on UN peacekeeping missions where
they have done the nation proud.
The Defence
Forces are national forces worn to upholding the country's
Constitution.
They are supposed to be a non-partisan and disciplined
force.
They are a respected national institution that should
serve and protect the people and the country regardless of the government
and the political leadership of the day.
They should be at the epicentre of defending and
protecting the people and not attacking and brutalising them. The
past few years have seen the deployment of some members of the army
into the villages to brutalise and attack innocent civilians on
the basis of their political affiliation.
It is international best practice that the army
should confine itself to the barracks and leave politics to the
politicians. As leaders, we have no reason to be fighting our national
institutions if they are performing their national duty. But we
naturally take umbrage at the militarisation of our politics and
the politicisation of the military.
Fellow Zimbabweans, we must honour and respect the
good work done by our defence forces as we implore upon them to
gain and keep our confidence by refusing to act in a partisan manner
at the expense of the national interest.
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