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Show
some sympathy for Mugabe's border-crossers
Brendan
Seary, The Star (SA)
August 04, 2007
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=17120
It's amazing how time
smoothes over the unpleasant cracks in your memory. Until I opened
the musty yellowing clipping files of my work from 1983, I had forgotten
how the pungent, sweet smell of death sticks in the back of your
throat, how it settles in the membranes of your nose. And how, no
matter how many beers you drink or how many showers you have, it
still lingers. I had found the bodies by smell. Six young men, piled
together, probably in indescribable terror in their last seconds
as AK-47 bullets ripped into them from close range. I had been told
I would find them just off the main Bulawayo-Plumtree road in the
Zimbabwean province of Matabeleland. I had rough directions, starting
from a kilometre marker on the road. But still it took some time
- time I didn't have, because my car was parked in full view on
the side of the road.
Not a desirable position
if the soldiers returned. Not difficult to find a young white man
in jeans and T-shirt in the scrubby bush. Not difficult to put a
bullet in his brain and get rid of a witness. With the battered
office Pentax camera, I squeezed off a few frames. Then I vomited.
Half-digested cheese omelette, bacon and toast meet reality. Later
- the same day, the same week, I can't remember - I found another
execution site. How many died there was difficult to tell, because
the bodies had been piled up, set alight and burnt to ashes. But
bones require immense heat to destroy, so one ghostly white femur
lay, half sticking up. For weeks in the early months of 1983 I traversed
Matabeleland, recording ever more horrifying tales of the destruction
wrought by Robert Mugabe's North Korean-trained Five Brigade. Mugabe
had unleashed the troops on the province - stronghold of his political
enemy, Joshua Nkomo - late in the previous year.
The unit was known by
its Shona name, Gukhurahundi, which means "the wind which blows
away the chaff before the rains". Clearly, Mugabe regarded
the Ndebele people as just such chaff. Five Brigade was not a conventional
military force, but more of a political killing machine. Reports
of the numbers of people who died go as high as 20 000. Apart from
the bodies, I saw burnt huts, and people with stab, hack and bullet
wounds. I spoke to women who had seen their husbands bayoneted in
front of them; to old men who hid under beds when they heard the
noise of our cars because they thought it was the soldiers returning;
to shy, bruised girls who spoke in a quiet, roundabout way through
gentle translators, about being gang-raped by drunken soldiers.
I didn't speak to many young men; most were either dead or had fled
to Botswana or South Africa.
Re-reading the files,
I was amazed by what I had forgotten - or buried away. (After my
sister reminded me, I relived my brief detention at the police station
in Gwanda, for allegedly illegally interviewing Joshua Nkomo on
one of his farms which had been seized by the government.) I was
put briefly in a cage for captured "dissidents" (before
the friendly station commander invited me to share some strong Tanganda
tea with him prior to letting me go) but had other things on my
mind in 1983, as an intense four-year relationship with a woman
ended badly. I'm a bit ashamed now that that is clearer to me than
genocide. I've long since healed, but Matabeleland still grieves.
What was launched upon the province's unfortunate people has since
been replicated in various ways on the rest of the people of that
long-suffering country. And now, as I see stories of people flooding
across the border, I share the pain of these people, my people (I
was born in Zimbabwe and will always be, at heart, a Zimbabwean).
Please, please, please, South Africans, show these poor people some
sympathy and dignity if you come across them.
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