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Security
forces deployed as historians
IRIN News
December 19, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/97081/ZIMBABWE-Security-forces-deployed-as-historians
Security forces
are being deployed across Zimbabwe ostensibly to record accounts
of the country's liberation struggle against white-minority
rule, but both political parties and independent analysts view the
tactic as a prelude to political violence ahead of next year's
scheduled elections.
In the aftermath
of the violent
2008 polls, a government
of national unity was formed between President Robert Mugabe's
ZANU-PF and two wings of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
It was decreed that both presidential and parliamentary elections
would be held simultaneously between March and October 2013. But
no date has yet been set for the elections, and no referendum on
the adoption of a new constitution - a prerequisite for the polls
- has been held.
Mugabe has been
president since the country's 1980 independence from Britain,
and, in accordance with the 2009 unity government agreement, ZANU-PF
has retained control of all security portfolios.
Defence Minister
Emmerson Mnangagwa has told local media the Military History Research
Project is an urgent issue. "People must know where this country
came from and how we got our freedom. The process of capturing this
vital historical information and events is a race against time,
as people who have this information in their memories are dying.
With the passage of time, the memories naturally fade away or get
distorted with age," he said.
The ZANU-PF
project involves the deployment of soldiers as well as "historians
and researchers" to interview people - such as traditional
leaders, chiefs, headmen and veterans of the liberation war - about
pre- and post-independence military history.
The deployment
of security forces comes after senior military commanders declared
they would not serve under any government that was not led by ZANU-PF.
Sticker
campaign
Meanwhile, ZANU-PF
is embarking on a strategy to visually identify which households
support the party.
ZANU-PF chairman
for Masvingo Province, Lovemore Matuke, told local media, "You
are supposed to have stickers at every household so that we identify
you. Our real supporters should have stickers at their homes. If
you do not have that sticker at your place, you will be skipped,"
Being "skipped"
is thought to mean that those without the markers will be ineligible
for agricultural inputs, such as the seed and fertilizer being distributed
in a recently launched ZANU-PF initiative.
But Pedzisai
Ruhanya, director of Zimbabwe Democracy Institute (ZDI), an independent
research organisation, told IRIN, "The two exercises [the
history project and sticker campaign] are simply designed to harvest
fear from the electorate. ZANU-PF wants to remind voters of the
role played by the military in the presidential election run-off
[in 2008] in which hundreds of people were butchered or maimed."
The 2008 poll
saw ZANU-PF lose its parliamentary majority for the first time since
independence and forced a second round of voting in the presidential
race. MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai pulled out of the running to
protest the political violence.
Ruhanya said
insisting on stickers to show support for ZANU-PF would make those
who did not comply vulnerable to political violence. "Deploying
soldiers in rural areas just before elections is an excuse for intimidating
voters, while the claim of conducting research is ludicrous. Are
soldiers researchers? Are soldiers authors of history books? Are
soldiers historians?" he said.
Spokesperson
for MDC Douglas Mwonzora told IRIN, "This is not genuine research
which is being conducted. It is a tactic of intimidation in which
war memories are going to be revived, including the 2008 trauma
in which the military campaigned for ZANU-PF. History is not written
by soldiers but by scholars and historians."
War
veterans
Mwonzora said,
"We wait to see what they will do about marking people's
houses, but the national and international community should not
allow that. At this point, we will hope the statement was just a
wild remark made by some crazy party official."
Major Mark Mbayiwa,
a retired soldier and liberation war veteran, told IRIN there were
two possible explanations for the security force deployment.
"The first
reason could be that there could be a genuine desire to record the
country's military history, given that it has not been properly
recorded and that ZANU-PF realizes they will not be in power after
elections and they feel that this is the time to correctly record
history.
"The second
possibility, which is most likely, is that they want to use that
as an excuse to intimidate people ahead of elections. These are
typical ZANU-PF [election] tactics."
Jabulani Sibanda,
chairperson of the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association
(ZNLWVA), denied his members were involved in political violence.
"What
needs to be understood is that, as freedom fighters, we fought against
a violent, cruel and evil system of colonialism, and as such, it
would be foolish to associate us with violence. While I may support
ZANU-PF, I do not tell people to beat anybody up. Why do people
question my support for ZANU-PF when descendants of colonialists
in Zimbabwe are being funded by western countries?"
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