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Dogs of war still prowl
Chenjerai
Hove, Mail & Guardian (SA)
December 11, 2009
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-12-11-dogs-of-war-still-prowl
A few days ago Prime
Minister Morgan Tsvangirai repeated his call for Zimbabweans in
the diaspora to return not only in person but with funds to rebuild
the country.
He was jeered in London
over the same call and caused much tension among Zimbabweans in
Britain as the government there waved his speech at asylum-seekers
as proof that things were fine and warned that they would be forcibly
returned to the "comfort and safety" of home sweet home.
Zimbabweans are generally
a peace-loving people to the point of sometimes being desolately
apathetic. One unarmed man in a small powerful position can torment
dozens of Zimbabweans and subdue them to silence. I remember a bus
driver tormenting and threatening to throw me and another man out
of the bus for protesting about his bad driving and the bribe he
had given to a police officer manning a roadblock to be allowed
to drive a bus with worn-out tyres.
None of the passengers
supported our protest. They unanimously agreed to have us thrown
out of the bus without a refund of our fare money. We were allowed
to continue our trip only on condition of silent humiliation ("you
don-t own a bus, so you can't control a bus").
But shortly afterwards,
a front tyre burst and we ended up in a wheat field, lucky enough
to have missed a huge tree on the roadside. It was only when their
lives had been seriously threatened that the other passengers realised
their folly in supporting the driver.
Some people think Zimbabweans
are on the cowardly side when they employ what I call survival strategies.
Faced with extreme danger to their person, Zimbabweans use two major
approaches: run away or fall silent. So, the diasporans took the
first option, to escape "to live to fight another day",
as Bob Marley says. It is pointless to be a dead hero. No Zimbabwean
will engage in "suicide bombing". What is the point of
bombing and dying if you cannot live to enjoy the benefit of the
act?
The prime minister has
to assure the exiles that the reasons for their "running away"
are no longer there, especially in terms of economic and personal
welfare -- fear as well as psycho-emotional trauma inflicted on
them by the state. But while he wants diasporans to return with
their purses open, he does not assure them that the reasons millions
of them left have been rectified. The political bus still has worn-out
tyres.
Recently the youth development
ministry announced that it has trained more than 80 000 Green Bombers
in the Border Gezi camps. In the negotiations on outstanding issues
there are substantial omissions -- such as who the Green Bombers
are being trained to bomb. All ordinary Zimbabwean citizens know
that they are the flies waiting to be devoured by these merciless
youths trained in the arts of brutality and human degradation.
As an educationist, I
would like to have Tsvangirai's government tell the nation the exact
content of the training courses these youths go through. In normal
schools parents know their children's curriculum. The instructors
and teachers have well-recognised qualifications that give the public
some confidence in what the students are learning in preparation
for respectable careers and professions.
And, in normal schools,
parents are assured of the quality of education and training by
the frequent visits of inspectors and evaluators. Parents also have
the right to visit and talk to the teachers and inspectors who are,
as we say in teaching, acting in loco parentis, some kind of second
parents.
But in these youth camps,
no one is allowed to visit to see what their children are being
taught. The results are visible only when the youths come out, equipped
with all sorts of skills of human and material destruction. They
are taught methods of torture, how to rape their own relatives,
how to destroy houses and all sorts of property. At least, this
is what Zimbabwean society sees them doing after leaving those camps.
The prime minister is
not assuring us that if we return home to rebuild, the destructive
youths will not be on standby to destroy, kill and maim as per their
training. They are still President Robert Mugabe's little dogs of
war, bent on terrorising their parents, political critics and opponents.
It is as if Tsvangirai is saying: come home and, if you are not
a member of the president-s party, share the violence with
me.
Parliament is there,
but basic changes to the laws that forced journalists and other
citizens out of the country are not about to be made. The army and
police are completely out of the control of the prime minister.
Joint Home Affairs Minister Giles Mutsekwa makes a few noises about
the arrest of one or two murder suspects, but every sane Zimbabwean
knows that the Mwales, the Kitsiyatotas and the others will surely
never be arrested anytime soon. They still salute their murderous
bosses who wear medals and look forward to being buried at Heroes'
Acre should they die anytime soon. The same murderers, rapists and
torturers are still the heroes parading in our streets and villages.
Yes, the coalition government
is a small sign of hope, but who wants a "small sign of hope"
in the political turbulence that forced so many to abandon their
whole lives and start afresh as beggars and nobodies in other lands?
Even the prime minister himself is continually insulted, as he was
when leader of the opposition. He is forbidden from appearing too
much on national radio and TV. The new ministers are treated as
if they do not exist.
Police chief Augustine
Chihuri will never take orders from Giles Mutsekwa. And innocent
people are still being arrested, tortured and imprisoned on fabricated
charges. The "disappeared" are still unaccounted for and
no one is about to be arrested for illegal abductions, torture and
imprisonment of innocent citizens.
This is the scenario
to which Tsvangirai wants people in the diaspora to return. The
diasporans know that the Mugabe wing of the government does not
respect a word of what they sign for. The Central Intelligence Organisation
is still on the rampage, harassing innocent civilians going about
their normal lives. The generals are having all they want in a political
climate of fear that they know the ageing president thrives on.
I have a feeling that
most Zanu-PF leaders are happy that the old man is so old that he
has lost control. They are then in charge and no one seems to supervise
their public conduct anymore. They can loot and plunder national
wealth as well as human lives as long as they sing their daily praises
to the "Supreme Leader". The Mugabe ministers have the
permission of the president to ignore the prime minister or even
insult him.
To the prime minister,
for whom I have tremendous respect, I would say: please dismantle
the national climate of fear and then ask the exiles to return.
As long as the two wings of government are still antagonistic and
separate, the people still feel they are being invited back to be
the grass that suffers when two elephants fight. Unfortunately,
of the two elephants, one has its tusks still intact while the other
has only its soft trunk.
* Chenjerai
Hove is a prize-winning Zimbabwean author living in Europe
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