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Give
us money, not treatment: Gukurahundi survivors
Thabo Kunene, Radio VOP
May 23, 2011
http://www.radiovop.com/index.php/national-news/6397-give-us-money-not-treatment-gukurahundi-survivors.html
Survivors of
post independence Gukurahundi massacres who still have bullets lodged
in their bodies say they don't want medical treatment but
financial assistance to ward off starvation and get out of poverty.
During a recent
healing and reconciliation prayer conducted by a Catholic priest
Father Marko Mkandla in Lupane, the survivors broke their silence
for the first time in more than 20 years and revealed the extent
of their injuries.Some told horrifying tales of how they survived
the massacres which still haunts the government.
Former Lupane
Member of Parliament,
Njabuliso Mnguni says he has been trying without much success to
persuade the survivors with bullets lodged in their bodies to seek
medical assistance.
"Some
donors and doctors are willing to assist with surgery to remove
the bullets from the survivors but the villagers say they don't
want medical treatment but financial assistance. Some are now sick
because of the injuries they sustained during the shootings,"
Mnguni told Radio Vop.
Mnguni said
during his visit to Lupane villages to speak to the survivors, he
discovered that many people were now willing to speak out about
what happened and how they survived the mass killings of innocent
people by the government's notorious Five Brigade which President
Robert Mugabe christened "Gukurahundi."
The brigade,
exclusively made up of former Zanla cadres from Tongogara Assembly
Point executed its mission with ruthless efficiency and left a trail
of blood and destruction.
Mnguni says
in one village he met three women who witnessed 24 villagers burning
to death after the soldiers rounded them up, put them in one hut
and set it on fire. The three survivors were among the villagers
put in the hut in Gwampa area but they managed to break free and
fled. The soldiers kept on firing at them but they missed until
they were in a safe area.
"I met
one old man we tried to help seek treatment for his injuries but
the doctors advised that if the bullet was removed, he could die.
Now everyone does not want to have the bullets removed while others
say there is no reason to remove the bullets now when they have
lived with them for more than 20 years," Mnguni told Radio
Vop.
According to
medical and forensic experts, survivors of firearm incidents can
carry bullets in their bodies for long periods of time as souvenirs.
If a bullet remains embedded in the body for a long time, it termed
as a souvenir bullet.
Bullets can
be lodged in bone or soft tissue in any firearm incident without
causing any serious damage or may be located in an area where surgical
removal could prove fatal. It is advisable to leave the bullet as
such if it is too dangerous to manipulate or if it is lodged in
an innocuous area without any potential risk or complication.
Foreign bodies
such as bullets can remain silent for a long period of time without
giving rise to clinical symptoms. It is important for the surgeon
to consider removal of a foreign body/bullet only if there is a
serious health hazard, keeping in mind the possibility of causing
a pathologic fracture.
"I think
the government has to find a way to pay compensation to survivors
and families of those who perished during the massacres,"
said Mnguni. President Mugabe described the massacres as"a
moment of madness by his government." But he has not publicly
acknowledged the killings or pay compensation to survivors.
According to
columnist Farai Chikowore, the collective communities in Zimbabwe
have never come forward to condemn the original sin of Gukurahundi.
The reasons of standing back and keeping quite are not justifiable
in that silence, fear and moving on are open to interpretation.
Zimbabweans communities have been silent on this issue for a long
time and one should not blame the victims for assuming the meaning
of the silence.
The idea of
moving on has obviously been proven wrong the current developments
but the idea also carries an element of misunderstanding and lack
of practical rationality. Those who are not directly Gukurahundi
victims indirectly understand the impact of this horrific crime.
Having said that the idea of moving on is not only wrong but it
is an insult to the victims. Moreover it raises the question whether
one is on the side of the victims or the perpetrators.
The logic that
Zimbabweans fear to talk about Gukurahundi demonstrates a lack of
vision. The fear of talking about Gukurahundi is the most unjustified
of all fears because we have already taken a stand against oppression.
If Zimbabweans fought the liberation struggle to free people from
oppression then they should condemn Gukurahundi publicly because
genocide is a violent form of oppression. What's more is that its
impact will affect the younger, future generations and generations
of generations if it's not dealt with.
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