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What
language do we speak?
Chenjerai
Hove
May 31, 2007
http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk/viewinfo.cfm?linkcategoryid=13&linkid=18&id=4576
'Elections are
a time for verbal abuse and excessive profanity by the President'
Many years ago,
as I worked for Mambo Press in Gweru, I had the privilege to meet
Benson Ndemera, then Governor of the Midlands. That was the time
of the 'dissidents', and I was innocently coming from Ascot Stadium
where Dynamos had played a draw with Pisa Pisa, Gweru United.
There had been
so much violence in Mutapa Township that when I drove into the township
with my two children to collect our domestic worker, we were besieged
by a massive crowd of youths, threatening to kill us.
I explained
that I had come to collect the woman who took care of the children.
'Is she Shona or Ndebele, and if she is Shona, what is she doing
staying in a Ndebele township?' they asked, armed with sticks and
pangas. 'No, she is Ndebele,' I said, humiliated in front of my
children who sat terrified in the back seat of the car.
And I was interrogated,
put through a kangaroo court as to why I dared employed a 'dissident'
in my house, to take care of Shona children. The youths forced me
to drive to where the woman lived with her parents, and then they
started interrogating her, beating her with sticks. Me and the children
could not take her with us, and she did not ever come home to collect
her belongings. Only God knows her fate!
These were the
first Green Bombers, led by Benson Ndemera, Governor of the Midlands,
who had been a ruthlessly violent Muzorewa man in the Gokwe area,
my home district during the late 1970s. The scars which Ndemera
left in the Gokwe are still alive in the memories of those who lived
through the Dzakutsaku years.
Then on the
Monday I decided that I should go to see the Governor to express
my concerns bout this reckless violence.
I asked Ndemera
about what was happening and the justification for it, and he was
very open to me, in his brutal language: 'The only language Africans
understand is force. If you try to discuss with them, you will not
succeed,' he said. I was saddened. To think that this Muzorewa man
had become more Zanu (PF) than some of us who had been in the midst
of the ZANLA forces area! Border Gezi was not the inventor of the
Zanu (PF) violence and torture.
It was Benson
Ndemera who later died in Parirenyatwa Hospital as a born-again
Christian, haunted by the corpses he had delivered to the national
conscience. But the tradition of Zanu(PF) violence did not start
with Ndemera or Border Gezi.
So many tragic
stories are told of how Robert Mugabe, little known that time, forcibly
ascended to power in Mozambique after escaping through the assistance
of Edgar 'Two-Boy' Tekere and the late Rekayi Tangwena. Tragic tales
which, if we had had our own Truth and Reconciliation Commission,
would have made many relatives of the survivors cry hot tears. In
the war zones, villagers labelled 'sell-outs' and 'witches' died
sad deaths, and I was there to witness some of the most gruesome
atrocities inflicted by the ZANLA forces as well as the Rhodesian
army.
Both armies
would not want to hear of anything like the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission of South Africa. Not at all! They know what they did.
And President Mugabe, as Prime Minister from 1980 to 1987, did not
bother to dismantle Ian Smith's machinery and technology of torture.
Even the inherited hangman, torturers, the CIO Chief, Ken Flower,
were asked to stay on, including senior torturers from the Selous
Scouts. Some of them even got better paid jobs with companies for
clearing landmines which they themselves had planted to kill innocent
villagers and ZANLA and ZIPRA guerrillas!
When President
Mugabe talked about his 'degrees in violence' during the student
demonstrations in the late 1980s, he meant it. The ruling party
has never shifted its language from persuasion to peace. Elections
are a time for verbal abuse and excessive profanity by the President.
I can swear
that President Robert Mugabe is the only national leader I can remember
who exudes with boundless linguistic 'insult' and profanity in the
world. There is no 'foul' word he has not used to insult the legitimate
opposition. Despite having been educated at a Catholic mission school,
Kutama, he has no space in his imagination for the language of decency
in political campaigns and discourse.
Until such time
that Mugabe realises the need to use the language of peace and persuasion
during election campaigns, we will still have these broken bodies,
political corpses and a violent police force which arrests the complainant
rather than the accused. Young people, the Border Gezi crop, will
continue to flood our hospitals with torture victims, cripples and
all for the sake of a few shiny coins.
I have come
to believe that it is only the politically desperate who use violence
for political ends. Otherwise we still have to ask the President
what kind of 'a man of the people' he is who uses so much violence
against the very same people he claims elected him.
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