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Kamba
looked for positive solutions
Joram
Nyathi, The Independent (Zimbabwe)
May 25, 2007
PROFESSOR Walter Kamba
died on May 18. It was exactly a month from Zimbabwe's Independence
anniversary celebrations on April 18, a day he helped so much to
bring to fruition at Lancaster House with his legal acumen, but
which he was not able to attend this year due to ill-health.
Having made his contribution
to the deliberations which gave birth to Zimbabwe, Kamba was rewarded
with the University of Zimbabwe vice-chancellorship in 1980 and
quietly left politics to politicians - and what a fine mess they
have made of those hopes and aspirations!
I first came face to
face with Professor Kamba as a first year student at the UZ in March
1983. He addressed us in front of the Library in his ringing voice,
telling us: "You are now adults. You have come to learn. There
is no headmaster and you will be your own supervisor." Anyway,
words to that effect.
We listened, mesmerised
as we had just come from high school and were "fortunate"
to be admitted to this awesome institution to further our education.
Coming from far flung rural settings, everything looked majestic,
from the imposing library building itself to the lecture theatres
and halls of residence. Food was aplenty and a matter of choice.
It was during Kamba's
tenure that enrolment spiralled from hundreds to four digits.
We set about our work.
Lecturers were revered then. Students competed to be the highest
in class. I think there was only one strike action in my first three
years there, during which I won two prizes. There was plenty of
tribal politics but things were kept under control. Politicians
competed to come and address students on what was going on in the
country. There was a turf war on campus between Zanu and PF-Zapu.
Matabeleland and the Midlands were on fire and drenched in blood.
Edgar Tekere was one
of the politicians whose lectures I attended because of his characteristic
fiery speeches. He declared before a mixture of terrified and ululating
students that the "problem in Matabeleland needs a military
solution". That is all I remember. I was sure the tales I was
hearing from relatives in Bulawayo were true and part of government
policy. It was the last time I attended those poisonous and intoxicating
lectures.
I still don't know whether
the 1987 deal between Zanu PF and PF-Zapu was a political or military
one. But looking at the way the opposition and the ruling party
relate, I can say we haven't made a paradigm shift in how we handle
political differences.
Still, the university
remained a place of relative peace if you kept out of active politics,
and Kamba managed fairly well.
Things have since changed.
Kamba did not just "retire" but left the University of
Zimbabwe a bitter man. He watched with disgust as politicians corrupted
and compromised the quality of education. I still recall when he
left in 1990, protesting against "too many unprofessional fingers
interfering" in university affairs. He felt what was happening
impaired the integrity of the university and that there was no more
"free inquiry" by students, something which universities
the world over seek to foster.
From there Kamba was
involved in a lot of "consultancy" work in and out of
the country. With his keen legal mind, he must have watched in despair
as the country slipped into lawlessness and the University of Zimbabwe
was reduced to a kindergarten where the riot police have become
frequent visitors, student halls have no windowpanes, ablutions
don't work, girls engage in prostitution to pay fees and to buy
food and the Library has no books.
Vice-Chancellor
Professor Levi Nyagura recently told a parliamentary portfolio committee
that the university had less than half the required lecturers. There
were around 600 lecturers when the university needs about 1 200,
he said. The rest have left the country for the proverbial greener
pastures while those still holed up in there have been on strike
for longer than they have been in the lecture rooms.
Professor Nyagura fell
short of saying some faculties had shut down. This is not something
Kamba would have been proud of as he contemplated his legacy in
the past few weeks - that all his efforts in transforming the University
of Zimbabwe from a small colonial institution to a national centre
of learning had collapsed under a black government. Ugandans were
quick to forgive Idi Amin for the ruin of Makerere University because
he was regarded as a buffoon.
More than that, Kamba
would have been bitter that his contribution to the rule of law
and the integrity of the judiciary is appreciated more in a foreign
country - Namibia - than in his land of birth. To crown the insult,
it is possible that Kamba may not have dreamt of a burial at the
Heroes Acre, but it must be galling that a foreigner he met only
in the 1980s found the time to write his obituary out of all the
Zimbabweans whose lives he touched and possibly transformed.
To that foreigner belongs
the last word. Swedish ambassador Sten Rylander said of Kamba: "He
was not one of those who looked back or who remained in the past.
His main concern was not that Zimbabwe would be a colony again.
He had foresight; he always looked forward - for constructive solutions
and initiatives that could break the negative spiral and put Zimbabwe
on a more positive path."
May his soul rest in
peace.
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