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The
battle for Matabeleland
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 14, 14-Mar-05)
By Tafi Murinzi
in Bulawayo
March 08, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_014_1_eng.txt
President Robert Mugabe and
his key opponent, Morgan Tsvangirai, both take their election battles
this weekend into a province where a crack army unit directly answerable
to Mugabe slaughtered an estimated 30,000 men, women and children 20 years
ago.
Mugabe and his ruling ZANU
PF party have only ever been able to control Matabeleland, heartland of
the minority Ndebele tribe, by force. It was once the stronghold of the
old Zimbabwe African People's Union, ZAPU, led by the late Joshua
Nkomo.
Two decades ago, growing lawlessness
in Matabeleland by a group of around 400 disillusioned ZAPU dissidents
- who killed six Australian, American and British tourists - gave Mugabe
the opportunity to crush Nkomo, ZAPU and the Ndebeles.
Capitalising on his friendship
with the then North Korean dictator Kim Il-Sung, Mugabe used around a
hundred North Korean military instructors to train a special unit, the
Fifth Brigade, made up entirely of the majority Shona ethnic group, to
crack down on Matabeleland in a campaign that became known as the "Gukurahundi",
meaning literally "the wind that blows away the chaff before the
spring rains".
From the moment it was deployed
in Matabeleland in 1983 under General Perence Shiri, the Fifth Brigade
waged a campaign of mass murder, beatings and arson deliberately targeted
at the civilian population.
"Villagers were forced
to sing songs in the Shona language praising ZANU PF while dancing on
the mass graves of their families and fellow villagers who had been killed
and buried minutes earlier," wrote Martin Meredith in "Robert
Mugabe", a biography of the Zimbabwean president. "The scale
of violence was far worse than anything that had occurred during the Rhodesian
war."
To this day the Mugabe government
has not acknowledged the tens of thousands of murders the Fifth Brigade
committed in Matabeleland, nor have those responsible been called to justice.
General Shiri, who was known as "Black Jesus", was promoted
to head of the air force and remains one of Mugabe's closest supporters.
The impact of the Gukurahundi
on Matabeleland has proved ineradicable. It has left a huge, raw, unhealed
wound among the people of the region who remember the many massacres.
Mugabe subsequently established
a one party state, but since the return of Zimbabwe to a multi-party system,
it is the MDC that has commanded the loyalty of the people of Matabeleland.
Mugabe's trip to Matabeleland
is a clear attempt to woo reluctant voters. "He would like to win
something in Matabeleland in order to legitimise his rule," said
Gordon Moyo, who heads a civic education lobby group called Bulawayo Agenda.
"He feels he has been ostracised in Matabeleland and wants his government
to be seen as a truly national government."
Matabeleland returns 21 of
the 120 directly elected members of the national parliament. But eyes
will be most firmly fixed on the constituency of Tsholotsho, an unremarkable,
very dry district around a small town some 120 kilometres northwest of
Bulawayo.
It was in Tsholotsho that Mugabe's
aggressive and hyperactive information minister Jonathan Moyo, architect
of the country's repressive media laws, set off a Zimbabwean political
earthquake three months ago.
Tsholotsho is Moyo's
home village and at a secret meeting there he plotted with a dozen other
senior ZANU PF officials to oust Mugabe's choice as his new vice
president, Joyce Mujuru - a fellow member of the president's Zezuru
sub-clan of the Shona, who in her days as a resistance fighter bore the
nom de guerre "Mrs Spillblood".
But Mugabe discovered the Tsholotsho
plot and Moyo was sacked from the government, ending his hopes of being
elected as the constituency's ZANU PF member. The truculent Moyo
reacted by deciding to stand as an independent against the sitting MDC
member, a woman who was Mugabe's chosen ZANU PF candidate.
Moyo, who had exercised widespread
patronage, courtesy of the huge government funds at his disposal when
he was Mugabe's favourite cabinet minister, believes he can win
the seat.
"He is seen as someone
who has brought development to the community," said a local schoolteacher.
Moyo has been given credit for constructing a local grain depot, tarring
dirt roads and providing electricity to a local business centre and several
schools. He has handed out blankets to local hospitals in winter and given
computers to schools, in an area from which more people have fled to South
Africa to escape economic misery than any other part of Zimbabwe.
Tsvangirai, who will be desperately
trying to defend the lacklustre sitting MDC member of parliament, Mtoliki
Sibanda, must have Moyo firmly in his sights.
Meanwhile, Mugabe has a number
of reasons for wanting to succeed in this area. As well as gaining a foothold
in Matabeleland, the president wants to destroy the ultra-powerful minister
who masterminded the mass invasions of white farms as well as crafting
the draconian Access to Information and Protection of Privacy.
The president is willing to
take the risk of venturing into Tsholotsho and the neighbouring constituency
of Lupane, where some of the worst Gukurahundi massacres occurred, because
Moyo is trying to establish a new network of independents and disillusioned
ZANU PF supporters to challenge the power of his former mentor.
If Moyo loses in Tsholotsho
he will be cast into the political wilderness and Mugabe, who has now
been in power for 25 years, will have crushed yet another potentially
dangerous political challenger.
*Tafi Murinzi
is the pseudonym for an IWPR journalist in Bulawayo.
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