|
Back to Index
Mugabe
to tighten Zezuru clan power
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 25, 04-Apr-05)
By *Joseph Chinembiri in Harare
April 05, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_025_1_eng.txt
Zimbabwe's president
Robert Mugabe, having guided his ruling ZANU PF party to another
parliamentary victory, will move quickly to consolidate the control
of his small Zezuru ethnic clan over the other clans that make up
the larger Shona tribal group.
Hidden from
the view of most of the foreign correspondents who arrived to report
last month's sixth Zimbabwe general election has been a bitter intra-ZANU
PF war between the Zezuru and the bigger Karanga clan.
As Mugabe's
confidence grew that the election had been fixed in ZANU PF's favour,
so the intensity grew behind the scenes of the Zezuru-Karanga struggle.
The daggers
of Mugabe and his Zezuru henchmen were particularly drawn to get
Emmerson Mnangagwa, the once powerful ZANU PF secretary for legal
affairs, speaker of parliament and most influential Karanga leader.
Mnangagwa, long
touted until recently as Mugabe's eventual successor as president,
was to be toppled in a carefully drawn Zezuru plot after the election.
But it has proved unnecessary because Mnangagwa was beaten in his
Kwekwe constituency by a candidate of the opposition MDC.
"We want Mnangagwa
out, totally out," a senior source in the Zezuru faction told IWPR
before polling day. "We are hoping and crossing our fingers that
he loses his Kwekwe seat. If he does, that will be the end of him.
He is not going to be lucky this time."
To outsiders
the great tribal split in Zimbabwe appears to be most visibly that
between the Shonas and the Ndebele - the latter an offshoot of the
Zulus of South Africa who now largely occupy the dry western part
of the country. But Zimbabweans themselves have long known that
the critical ethnic and cultural divide - the one that will in the
long run decide the fate of their troubled state - is between the
distinctly different Shona clans.
The Shona, who
began arriving from west central Africa more than a thousand years
ago, share a mutually intelligible language. But ethnically they
are not homogenous. Between the clans there is a diversity of dialects,
religious beliefs and customs.
The five principal
clans are the Karanga, Zezuru, Manyika, Ndau and Korekore. Of these,
the biggest and most powerful clans are the Karanga and the Zezuru.
The Karanga are the largest clan, accounting for some 35 per cent
of Zimbabwe's 11.5 million citizens. The Zezuru are the second biggest,
and comprise around a quarter of the total population.
The Karanga
provided the bulk of the fighting forces and military leaders who
fought the successful 1972-80 chimurenga (struggle) that secured
independence and black majority rule. Nevertheless, the ZANU movement
- since renamed ZANU PF - was led by a Zezuru intellectual with
several degrees, Mugabe, who did not do any fighting.
Clan differences
surfaced with a vengeance in late 2004, after Mugabe filled every
top position in the state with members of his Zezuru clan and pushed
out the Karangas.
One of the last
prominent Karangas in Mugabe's administration, Foreign Minister
Stan Mudenge, is almost certain to be sacked when Mugabe announces
his new governing team. He will be replaced by Tichaona Jokonya,
a Zezuru who was formerly a diplomat but who won a parliamentary
seat in the March election.
The Karangas,
who know that their men won the chimurenga, are angry but emasculated.
How they will react to Mugabe's consolidation of Zezuru power is
at present difficult to predict.
There are three
other Shona clans - the Manyika, Ndau and Korekore. Of these, the
Manyika, from the Eastern Highlands, are the largest with perhaps
1.8 million
of the 11.5 million Zimbabwean people.
Mugabe intends
wooing the Manyika by appointing one of their number, Oppah Muchinguri,
as speaker of parliament in succession to Mnangagwa. In the murky
world of ZANU PF internal politics, Muchinguri holds a powerful
and dangerous card. In the bloody war that preceded Zimbabwe's independence
in
1980, she was
personal assistant to the ZANU guerrilla army chief, General Josiah
Tongogara.
Just weeks before
independence, Tongogara died in a mysterious and as yet unexplained
car accident in Mozambique. Muchinguri has never spoken about the
circumstances of Tongogara's death, which is cloaked in mystery,
suspicion and rumour. Mugabe has kept Muchinguri close to him, and
her elevation will further secure her silence.
It will also
help quell discontent in Manicaland, whose representatives at the
ZANU PF electoral congress last December cast their votes for Mnangagwa
against Mugabe's chosen Zezuru candidate, Joyce Mujuru, for the
newly created state post of second vice president. The Manyika provincial
chairman of ZANU PF, Mike Madiro, was subsequently expelled from
the party along with five other non-Zezuru provincial chairmen.
Assuming Muchinguri
does become speaker of parliament, every other top post in the land
will be held by Zezurus.
Mugabe's other
vice president, Joseph Msika, is a Zezuru. Defence Minister Sydney
Sekeramayi, who is also Mugabe's spymaster, is a Zezuru, as are
the chiefs of the three main security forces.
Armed Forces
chief General Constantine Chiwenga - whose highly combative wife
Jocelyn threatened to eat a white farmer at the height of the 2000-2004
farm invasions - replaced a veteran Karanga fighter, General Vitalis
Zvinavashe.
The Air Force
chief is Air Marshal Perence Shiri, former commander of the notorious
North Korea-trained Fifth Brigade, which in 1983 swept though Matabeleland
destroying entire Ndebele villages and murdering more than
20,000 civilians.
Shiri, also known as Black Jesus, christened his campaign against
the Ndebele with a Shona word, Gukurahundi, meaning "the early rain
that washes away the chaff before the spring rains".
Mugabe has since
rewarded Shiri - who replaced a Karanga - with three confiscated
white farms.
The national
police chief is Commissioner Augustine Chihuri, a Zezuru who has
publicly declared his personal unwavering support for Mugabe and
ZANU PF.
Further enhancing
his grip on power, Mugabe has placed control of the electoral process
since 1985 in the hands of his fellow Zezuru - Tobaiwa Mudede, the
all-powerful registrar general. Mudede has been in charge of all
Zimbabwe's electoral bodies and has been widely accused of rigging
all elections for the past 20 years in favour of Mugabe, who has
rewarded him with two former white-owned commercial farms.
The judiciary
also is in the hands of the Zezuru. Godfrey Chidyausiku, a Zezuru,
was appointed chief justice in 2001 after Mugabe toppled his predecessor,
Anthony Gubbay, one of the last white Zimbabweans on the bench.
With Chidyausiku's appointment came the gift of the 895-hectare
Estees Park farm, north of Harare, newly confiscated from its white
owner. Chidyausiku has ensured that all judges conform to Mugabe's
decrees and has appointed two Zezuru relatives as High Court judges
to help him.
One of Zimbabwe's
most independent judges, Justice Benjamin Paradza, a Karanga, was
forced out of office. Justice Moses Chinhengo, another Karanga constantly
criticised by Mugabe's ministers for his independent judgments,
resigned in disgust and said, "I hope that in future I will be able
to serve Zimbabwe in another capacity as the call of duty may demand."
The Karanga
are concentrated mainly in the Masvingo and Midlands provinces.
Ironically, outgoing Home Affairs Deputy Minister Rugare Gumbo,
a Karanga from Mberengwa, several hundred kilometres west of Masvingo
town, is being groomed as one of the new Karanga ZANU PF "godfathers".
During one of
the periods of internal ZANU bloodletting in its pre-independence
exile years in Mozambique and Zambia, Gumbo was imprisoned in an
underground dungeon from the mid-1970s until in 1980. His political
comeback was engineered by the late vice president Simon Muzenda,
a powerful Karanga, who Mugabe always used to cool anti-Zezuru sentiment
among the Karangas.
*Joseph Chinembiri
is the pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|