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Too
early for forgiving
IRIN News
Jul 01, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79044
Martin Gurajena*,
like many other opposition activists forced to flee Zimbabwe's ongoing
political violence, has a difficult choice to make: when will it
be safe to go home?
Gurajena, 48, his wife
and four children, are among 20 families being sheltered by a church
in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city. The militia of Robert Mugabe's
ZANU-PF party - young men with a reputation for brutality - had
driven them out of Mberengwa, in the central Midlands Province,
because they were members of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC).
MDC leader Morgan
Tsvangirai's decision not
to contest the presidential run-off election against Mugabe
on 27 June, on the grounds that too many of his supporters had already
been killed since the first-round poll on 29 March, was a heavy
blow for Gurajena.
"I had prayed and
hoped that Tsvangirai would win, and I could return back to my village
to rebuild our home that was burnt down by ZANU-PF supporters. But
after he pulled out of the elections my heart sank. As it is right
now, my livestock are scattered all over, as I did not get a chance
to collect the livestock when I escaped - I was warned that I would
be killed if I delayed," Gurajena told IRIN.
He was clearly torn by
deciding whether to go back or not. He said he felt an emotional
responsibility to the people he had left behind, but he was also
aware that he was still a target for the militia; even if they had
a sudden change of heart, his own chief, whom he described as a
staunch ZANU-PF supporter, might not allow him to resettle.
"My whole life is
ruined, so what will happen to me and my family? We ran away from
ZANU-PF militia and there is no way I can go back there ... the
violence taking place across the country is terrifying, and they
are still beating people in Mberengwa - I cannot go there."
"I might forgive,
but I will not forget"
Martha Hove, a widow
and a mother of four, was a polling agent for the MDC during the
29 March elections. She shut her eyes as she recounted how she had
been driven out of Mberengwa by militia, led by "war veterans"
who torched her homestead and beat her, the scars of the assault
still visible on her face.
"It was by the grace
of God that I survived the attack - the war veterans wanted to kill
me. I don't think I will return to Mberengwa. I will have to relocate
with my family to another district, even in Matabeleland [in the
south of the country] if the people accept me." Hove is of
the majority Shona ethnic group; Matabeleland, with Bulawayo its
capital, is predominantly Ndebele.
"I might forgive,
but I will not forget what they did to me. Those that attacked me
are well known people to me; they are my neighbours, but they turned
into animals when they were beating me," said Hove. Mberengwa
has historicaly been a hardcore ZANU area.
Useni Sibanda, the national
co-ordinator of Christian Alliance, a grouping of church organisations
taking care of people displaced by the violence in a network of
safe houses, said the number of victims was still rising.
"Currently we are
not even thinking of relocating these people, as we are still receiving
more victims of violence. Once the violence subsides, then we can
start looking at options of relocating them or allowing them to
return to their original villages," he told IRIN.
Sibanda would not say
how many people his organisation was sheltering, but said hundreds
of families had been displaced and were being accommodated by well-wishers
in Bulawayo. He added that if the violence continued the churches
would be unable to cope.
According to the MDC,
close to 90 party officials and supporters have been killed since
March, and thousands made homeless. Party spokesman Nelson Chamisa
said a transitional "government of national healing" was
urgently needed to allow the country to reunite.
"The reason the
MDC is calling for a government of national healing is to allow
a process for people to forgive each other to take place. As it
is, there is no way these people will live in harmony with the same
people that wanted to kill them yesterday," he said.
The MDC was working with
civil society organisations on an audit of homes and property lost
during the election period, and would then approach the international
community for financial aid to help with reintegration, Chamisa
said.
Gurajena still thinks
of home. "Some of my neighbours were also attacked, and stories
are coming through from the village that some were killed. I need
to go back so that I know who has died and who is still alive,"
he said. "Mugabe has won [the presidential run-off], so the
war veterans should allow us to go back and rebuild our homes and
let us continue with our lives."
* Not his
real name
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