|
Back to Index
Mugabe
brews another storm
Patrice Makova,
The Standard (Zimbabwe)
September 01, 2013
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2013/09/01/mugabe-brews-another-storm/
President Robert Mugabe
yesterday vowed that members of the MDC formations would never be
buried at the heroes Acre, saying the shrine was only reserved for
Zanu-PF cadres.
Speaking at the burial
of Zanu-PF politburo member, Kumbirai Kangai, Mugabe said the MDC-T
officials clamouring for their members to be buried at the National
heroes’ acre were day-dreaming.
He said the national
heroes acre was a preserve of Zanu-PF-linked officials only. Mugabe
said political parties which supported the imposition of sanctions
against Zimbabwe had no right to call for their officials to be
buried at the national shrine.
“They [MDC-T] want
their zvitototo [daft people] buried here. We say no. The only people
we will bring here are the clean ones. Heroes of heroes,”
he said.
“We created this
Heroes Acre and paid a lot to make it beautiful. They must choose
their own burial places. The country has many anthills where they
can bury their officials.”
Mugabe likened MDC-T
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai to people in the Bible who supported the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ.
MDC officials could not
be reached for comment.
Last week, Mugabe
threatened to punish urban dwellers especially those in Harare and
Bulawayo, for ditching him in the July
31 election, a threat that was widely condemned.
In less than seven days,
Mugabe paid three visits to the shrine. On Sunday he officiated
at the burial of National Railways of Zimbabwe (NRZ) general manager
and Zanu-PF strategist, Mike Karakadzai.
On Thursday, he was back
again for the burial of Zanu-PF founding member, Enos Nkala. He
said leaders should not be selfish, but work for the empowerment
of the majority.
Mugabe said leaders should
not self-enrich themselves.
“Let us not be
greedy and loot everything that comes along our way,” he said
in an apparent reference to corrupt Zanu-PF officials, particularly
former cabinet ministers.
Mugabe also made a thinly
veiled attack on devolution which is now provided for under the
new constitution.
He said no province should
claim total ownership and revenue from natural resources endowed
there.
“Resources found
in any area should benefit the whole country. No province should
claim exclusive rights to resources found there,” said Mugabe.
He also attacked Zanu-PF
leaders who have become alcoholics.
“Don’t be
drunkards. There are some of you who stagger in public because of
drinking too much beer. This is not leadership,” said Mugabe.
The Zanu-PF leader again
spoke of the July 31 elections which his party won resoundingly.
He insisted that although
critics were saying the elections were not credible, the environment
was free and peaceful with no disturbances recorded.
Mugabe said the 2013
elections could not be compared to the 1980 ones administered by
the British disputed.
“The British themselves
never had an election [2013] of this nature. They beat each other
on the streets. At some places they throw rotten eggs. Our elections
were absolutely quiet and people voted in a very calm atmosphere,”
he said.
But as the debate about
his age rages on a month after winning a seventh term in office,
Mugabe yesterday continued to mesmerise his supporters with his
recollection of historical events at the burial of Kangai.
Mugabe said he and other
Zanu-PF leaders such as Kangai survived several attempts on their
lives including bomb and grenade attacks in the run up to the 1980
elections.
“All the same,
we won the elections,” he said.
Mugabe spoke of the internal
struggles in Zanu which saw at least two rebellions being staged.
He said the first one,
dubbed the Nhari Rebellion, was led by misguided officials. Mugabe
said the other one calling itself Vashandi led by the likes of former
Zanla commander Wilfred Mhanda, popularly known as Dzino, wanted
to cause confusion in the liberation struggle. He said the group
wanted Mugabe and other leaders to make individual applications
and be vetted before being allowed to come to the war front in Mozambique.
He said after the failed
Geneva 1976 talks, he and others tricked leaders of Vashandi into
coming for a meeting in Beira, Mozambique where they were arrested
only to be released in 1980.
Mugabe said the arrest
enabled the Zanu leaders such as Zanla commander Josiah Tongogara
and Kangai to finally visit the war camps previously under the control
of the rebels.
Mugabe also spoke in
detail about the Zanu-PF’s Dare reChimurenga (revolutionary
council) where the likes of Kangai, Zanu chairman Hebert Chitepo,
Zanla chief Josiah Magama Tongogara and Zanu-PF spokesperson Rugare
Gumbo were members.
He said the revolutionary
council was tasked by the Zanu executive with the responsibility
of prosecuting the liberation struggle.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|