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Gukurahundi
ghost haunts Matabeleland
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Yamikani
Mwando (AR No.153, 30-Jan-08)
January 30, 2008
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=342317&apc_state=henpacr
Almost a quarter of a
century on, the ghost of Gukurahundi continues to stalk Zimbabwe's
Matabeleland region.
Gukurahundi - a
Shona term meaning "the rain that washes away the chaff"
- was a military crackdown in rural Matabeleland and the Midlands
in the early Eighties in which an estimated 20,000 people were killed,
most of them civilians.
Pressure groups in Zimbabwe
continue to campaign to persuade President Robert Mugabe's
administration to finally make public what happened during the offensive,
which they say amounted to a government-sponsored genocide.
They are calling for
a truth and reconciliation commission to be established, similar
to the one set up to help South Africans come to terms with the
human rights abuses perpetrated under apartheid.
However, the Zimbabwean
authorities are resisting pressure both from activists and from
families of victims, who have demanded compensation for relatives
who were killed or disappeared without trace.
Mugabe, who is on record
as saying the massacres were a "moment of madness",
has refused to offer a public apology for what many regard as a
policy of ethnic cleansing that targeted the Ndebele people .
In 1983-84, Mugabe, then
prime minister of the newly-independent Zimbabwe, dispatched the
Fifth Brigade - an elite unit trained by the North Koreans - to
the Midlands and Matabeleland to quash what he said were insurgents
bent on overthrowing him. He accused Joshua Nkomo, his main political
rival at the time and leader of the ZAPU party, of supporting the
insurgents and vowed to crush those he termed "dissidents".
The ensuing offensive
left unarmed villagers at the mercy of the military. Survivors said
the killings were systematic and targeted ZAPU officials and also
leading community figures such as teachers, nurses and village headmen.
Many of the dead were buried in unmarked graves or thrown down disused
mines.
ZAPU leaders were expelled
from government and incarcerated.
Nkomo accepted a deal
with Mugabe in 1987 in an effort to end the hostilities. He became
one of the country's two vice-presidents, and his party was
subsumed into the ruling ZANU party, which was renamed ZANU-PF with
the added letters standing for "Patriotic Front".
Ibhetshu Likazulu, a
human rights group based in Matabeleland, commemorates the Gukurahundi
killings on January 20 each year. Its leader Qhubekani Dube is demanding
that Mugabe be brought to account for the campaign.
"Nothing has ever
been officially made public, despite Mugabe himself having set up
commissions of inquiry in the 1980s to investigate the Gukurahundi
massacres," Dube told IWPR.
"What we only have
are eyewitness accounts, and many of the people who suffered are
now dead. What is Robert Mugabe hiding? We will never rest as long
as the truth is not told about why this terrible thing happened."
The only comprehensive
report on the Gukurahundi campaign was published in
1989 by the Legal Resources Foundation and the Catholic Commission
for Justice and Peace. The latter group tried to present the report
to the authorities when it came out, but the government has refused
to accept its findings.
A documentary about Gukurahundi
made by a Bulawayo-based filmmaker was launched in South Africa
last year, but has yet to be shown inside Zimbabwe. The producers
say plans are afoot to showcase it this year despite concerns that
authorities will not allow a public viewing.
"It is time the
nation was told about Gukurahundi. This cannot be allowed die a
natural death just like that," Zenzele Ndebele, who produced
the documentary, told IWPR.
"We had to be extremely
careful when we were making this documentary, for fear of reprisals
from the authorities."
"A lot of mystery
surrounds the Gukurahundi era, and the resistance by the government
to discuss the issue is probably because the people who committed
the crimes are still alive. Therefore . . . trying to make something
which would expose them was obviously going to be resisted."
One source of resistance
to attempts to shed more light on the atrocities comes from former
ZAPU leaders who were persecuted by Mugabe during the Gukurahundi
campaign but who have since become senior figures in government
and ZANU-PF.
Some activists in Matabeleland
say the province should declare itself a federal state, accusing
Mugabe of deliberately failing to invest there in the years since
Gukurahundi. But such calls have failed to win significant support
in the region, and political parties that placed devolution on their
agendas have fallen by the wayside in past elections.
Ibhetshu Likazulu remains
committed to talking about the ghost of Gukurahundi, whatever happens
in the joint presidential and parliamentary elections scheduled
for March 29.
"Even if Mugabe
loses in the coming polls, that will not stop the push to have those
who committed the crimes against humanity prosecuted," said
Dube.
Yamikani Mwando is the
pseudonym of a 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.
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