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Swords that never become ploughshares
Arkmore
Kori
July 11, 2009
'If yesterday
I fought you as an enemy, today you have become a friend and ally
with the same national interest, loyalty, rights and duties as myself.
If yesterday you hated me, today, you cannot avoid the love that
binds you to me and me to you. It is not folly therefore that in
these circumstances, anybody should seek to revive the wounds and
grievances of the past. If ever we look into the past, let us do
so for the lessons that past has taught us namely that oppression
and racism are inequities that must never again find scope in our
political and social system'.
The above quote
from President Mugabe's 1980 speech has been cited several times,
but it is not uninteresting to repeat. Firstly, it is a well crafted
masterpiece. It naturally forced many, including his former 'white'
enemies (who have remained his enemies) to make positive, immature
and erroneous conclusions on his character. Ray Welenksyp, the former
Prime Minister of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, for
example, told Time Magazine in November 1980: 'Mugabe is the ablest
black African leader I have ever seen'.
Secondly, to
the extent the speech is loaded with catchy, invigorating assurances,
it gave then Prime Ministers qualities and attitudes he has never
shown: forgiveness and reconciliation. In fact, it achieved an intentional
or unintentional diplomatic sensation, resulting to a total 'ignorance'
of Zimbabwean affairs. It is not surprising the slain of 20 000
people in Matebeleland's Gukurahundi, albeit started three years
after this historic speech, received scant international attention.
Yet then Prime Minister
remained a beam of African leadership and peacemaker. He was given
a peace building mission in Mozambique, which he successfully accomplished.
It is curious how he committed to creating peace in Mozambique when
his Fifth Brigade was at the zenith of Matebeleland massacres, the
genesis of beatings, torture, killings and harassment we are still
experiencing today. The consequent 1987 Unity Accord echoed the
1980 reconciliation promises. But the re-emergence of ZAPU shows
some of its fallacies.
Enter GNU! Most
are optimistic about this initiative. It has potential for rebuilding
the economy and above all, a foundation for peace and reconciliation.
However, our President is adamant of turning swords into ploughshares.
'You wouldn't speak to an idiot of that nature', he says of Johnnie
Carson, an American diplomat he recently met in Libya. Probably
Carson failed to show him the 'Victorian' respect he covets, but
describing him as 'idiot' is too much. It is offensive and an insult
to Carson's acumen. This is not the first time he has lashed toxic
messages for the West. Obscenities, including some for the opposition,
have been part of Mugabe's Chimurenganization episode.
However, a lot
of his supporters, including ZANU PF Women's League, love it. They
ululate in praise of his venomous tongue. Some dance. And others
have promised to strip for him! True: the effects of colonisation
and neo-colonialism are partly responsible for our poverty, but
rebuking 'whites', which Mugabe did since 2000, would not end our
miseries. Just like ZANU PF in GNU, the West is a problem, but also
part of the solution to our crises. It's painful the President knows
turning swords into ploughshares is necessary and beneficial for
the country. Yet he has deliberately sharpened and re-sharpened
them to distort rebuilding processes.
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