The Dark Chapter of Zimbabwe's History That Won't Go Away
by Ignatius Banda
With Zimbabwe's new President Emmerson Mnangagwa just
concluding a 100-day timeline to address what he considered the
country's most pressing issues, which focused on economic revival, human
rights activists have their own timeline.
Survivors
of the 1980s Gukurahundi atrocities, where a campaign by government
soldiers claimed thousands of civilian lives, are demanding that the new
president address the country's dark past.
Activists
accuse President Mnangagwa, serving military and top government
officials of perpetrating crimes against humanity more than three
decades ago and see Mnangagwa's rise to power as an opportunity that was
denied them by former President Robert Mugabe to address the
atrocities, which various researchers say claimed up to 20,000 lives.
Mugabe,
accused of ordering the brutal campaign against civilians, notoriously
brushed off what others have called a genocide as a "moment of madness"
and refused to issue an apology.
In
the past while still serving under Mugabe, Mnangagwa raised the ire of
surviving victims and relatives of the Gukurahundi killings when he
appeared to dismiss calls for a Truth and Reconciliation Commission by
telling the nation that there was no need to revisit that troubled past.
Modelled
along South Africa's TRC which sought closure on apartheid-era human
rights violations, disappearances and state-sponsored political murders,
the commission would see perpetrators coming forward and giving public
apologies in what researchers have called restorative justice.
Instead of getting prison terms, the perpetrators would get amnesty and pardons from their victims.
Charles
Gumbo is one such Gukurahundi survivor. He has bayonet scars on his
head and is now an activist agitating for the southwest of Zimbabwe's
autonomy. Gumbo says President Mnangagwa, senior members of the ruling
party ZANU PF and military commanders who propped Mnangagwa's rise to
power must answer to the Gukurahundi atrocities.
"We
know them," he told IPS. "All of them are still in government and going
about with impunity. We will never rest until this is resolved to our
satisfaction," Gumbo said.
However,
there is skepticism that President Mnangagwa will institute any
official government inquiry when he is largely seen as "accused number
one" in what remain unresolved "crimes against humanity," as Gumbo put
it.
When the
Gukurahundi campaign was launched in the 1980s, ostensibly to quell an
insurgency by dissents in Zimbabwe's Matabeleland and Midlands regions
that saw the deployment of the military, Mnangagwa as the security
minister became the face of the brutal crackdown.
Presence
Shiri, who was retired as commander of the Air force of Zimbabwe to
take up a post in President Mnangagwa's new cabinet as lands minister
was commander of the 5th Brigade, the military unit trained by North
Koreans to carry out the Gukurahundi tortures and killings.
He too has over the years refused to answer questions about the human rights violations.
"This
government has no will to solve the Gukurahundi issue," said Zenzele
Ndebele, a Zimbabwean journalist and filmmaker whose 2007 documentary
"Gukurahundi: A Moment of Madness" has never been shown in Zimbabwe.
The film was launched in neighbouring South Africa after the authorities failed to grant permission for public screenings.
"The incompetency of the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission works in government's favour," Ndebele told IPS.
In
January this year, only weeks into his elevation with assistance from
the military, President Mnangagwa signed into law the Peace and
Reconciliation Bill which established the National Peace and
Reconciliation Commission (NPRC) to "promote national healing."
However,
since the NPRC launched countrywide public meetings in February,
activists have demanded that government address the Gukurahundi issue,
something that the commissioners are accused of not being eager to
include in their agenda.
As
Gukurahundi demonstrations greeted Mnangagwa's rise to power, special
presidential advisor Christopher Mutsvangwa told the nation last
December that continued discussion of Gukurahundi was "unhelpful" and
"irresponsible," in comments that were seen as reflecting the
president's views.
Velempini
Ndlovu, an independent researcher documenting oral testimonies of the
Gukurahundi, said victims seek closure and lament that they have been
denied the opportunity to formally engage government.
"People
want to be able to openly express their pain without being policed and
told to 'get over it.' A gross human rights violation occurred," Ndlovu
told IPS.
Gukurahundi
continues to polarise Zimbabweans, heating up online bulletin boards
with some insisting the new president's focus should be efforts to
resuscitate the economy in a country where labour unions say more than
80 percent of the population are without jobs, while others say for the
country to find peace and move on, the Gukurahundi must be discussed
openly.
Other activists
are demanding reparations with reports that thousands have failed to
obtain legal documents such as birth certificates in the absence of
their deceased parents killed during Gukurahundi.
"Victims
want to be allowed to get identification as they are many who because
their parents couldn't get death certificates they also couldn't get
birth certificates and IDs," Ndlovu said.
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