Who exactly is this Radical Soldier? By the time we need to write his obituary....it will be too late to ask. Please also check www.zimfinalpush.blogspot.com and related websites.

"MY WIFE YOU HURT ME!!!" REV M S HOVE

"MY WIFE YOU HURT ME!!!" REV M S HOVE
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Thursday, 12 April 2007

VIOLET OF SWRADIOAFRICA INTERVIEWS MOHADI AND HIS VICTIMS!

 
 
 
Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi & Opposition Official Grace Kwinjeh
The guests on the programme Hot Seat are an unlikely pair: Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi and opposition official Grace Kwinjeh. Grace was among the group of opposition leaders who were arrested and tortured while in police custody four weeks ago. But despite overwhelming video and picture evidence showing brutalised activists, the minister denies this.
Broadcast Tues 10 April 2007
 
Violet Gonda: My guest on the programme Hot Seat today is Grace Kwinjeh the Deputy Secretary for International Relations in the Tsvangirai MDC. She was among the group of opposition leaders who were arrested and tortured while in police custody four weeks ago and she's currently in South Africa for medical treatment. Welcome on the programme Grace.
Grace Kwinjeh: Thank-you.
Violet: Now Grace, before we start I just wanted to play for you and also for our listeners an interview that I did with Kembo Mohadi, Monday evening. I asked him to comment about the attacks that are taking place in Zimbabwe right now and this is what happened.
Kembo Mohadi: Hello
Violet: Hello, Minister Mohadi?
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Yes
Violet: Hello Minister, my name is Violet; I'm calling from SW Radio Africa
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Where?
Violet: From SW Radio Africa
Minister Kembo Mohadi: What can I do for you Madam?
Violet: Minster I wanted to find out from you or to get a comment from you about the allegations from the MDC that a lot of their activists are getting arrested and tortured in custody. And, as the Home Affairs Minister, I wanted to find out or to get your comment on this.
Minister Kembo Mohadi: No we don't arrest anybody and torture people here in Zimbabwe . We arrest criminals and even if they are terrorist criminals we don't torture them. The law takes its own course, if someone has got a case to answer he goes to Court and he is convicted. Those allegations are false.
Violet: But Minister Mohadi these MDC leaders and activists have actually appeared in Court covered in blood. So how can you explain this?
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Ah no, when was that?
Violet: How can you explain this?
Minister Kembo Mohadi: When was that? When was that? When did they appear in Court covered in blood? That is a wrong statement. When was it?
Violet: The MDC…
Minister Kembo Mohadi: did you see them covered in blood?
Violet: Morgan Tsvangirai…
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Did you see them covered in blood?
Violet: MorganTsvangirai appeared on TV
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Ah no
Violet: He was seen on TV
Minister Kembo Mohadi: He was not even covered in blood. That's a lie. You come to Zimbabwe and witness this for yourself and don't be talking about things that you don't know. And we don't ban people from coming to Zimbabwe . Why do you have to listen to CNN and Sky News and BBC? Come to Zimbabwe and see for yourself and report correctly.
Violet: But Minister Mohadi you know that….
Sound of the phone line going dead
Violet: Hello? Hello? And we lost connection with the Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi, but I called him back and this is what happened.
Violet: Minister we must have got cut off?
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Yes, I said come to Zimbabwe and report correctly man! We are bombed by the MDC, they are involved in terrorist activities and you don't report about that! We've got a lot of them in custody, we've got a lot of them that are going on trial and have been remanded by our Courts. And they are possessing arms of war and you don't report about that. I say come to Zimbabwe and see for yourself man! We don't ban you from coming. You come to Zimbabwe you can see it for yourself other than to report from hearsay. I don't want to be talking to people that get these things from hearsay.
Violet: But that's why I'm talking to you direct so that we can hear it from you
Minister Kembo Mohadi: No, no, no, you are talking to me directly over the phone. Come to Zimbabwe and report correctly!
Violet: But you know that SW Radio Africa is banned in Zimbabwe ?
Minister Kembo Mohadi: What ban? You come to me, I'm the Minister of Home Affairs and say you want to come and report then you, you you will cover the story that you want, other than talking. I don't want to be talking to you about rumours please; please can you please leave it alone
Violet: But that's why I'm talking to you
Minister Kembo Mohadi: No, no, no, can you please leave me alone. There's nothing like that. I've told you that everything is false so what else do you want?
Violet: You have said that journalists can come to Zimbabwe , but how many journalists have been arrested?
Kembo Mohadi: Yeah why don't you come to Zimbabwe if you, you know who has been arrested?
Violet: Wasn't there a journalist Gift Phiri, an independent journalist who was arrested last week?
Kembo Mohadi: Who is that? Who has been arrested?
Violet: Gift Phiri is a journalist that's actually at the Avenues Clinic right now
Kembo Mohadi: Ya but you come to Zimbabwe
Violet: Receiving treatment after he was brutalised by the police
Kembo Mohadi: No you've got to, if you come to Zimbabwe you've got to register, you've got to report that you are a journalist, you are accredited. Don't just come and report when you are not accredited. Whether you are a freelance or what you get accredited man. We are a sovereign country here. You can't just come and do things as if you are on a picnic.
Violet: So are you saying…?
Minis ter Kembo Mohadi: We must know what; we must know that you are in Zimbabwe and that you are reporting for that and that paper.
Violet: Minister Mohadi: there are several journalists who…
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Rumour spreader, why do you, why, why ….
Violet: There are several journalists who have been assaulted
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Now there is no journalist that is in jail here in Zimbabwe, can you come tomorrow, fly tomorrow and then phone me, phone me on Wednesday because tomorrow I'm in Cabinet and fly in and come and identify a journalist that is in prison here or that is…
Violet: Gift Phiri is one journalist
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Ya you come and show me. There is no one of that sort, that is…
Violet: He was released just a few days ago
Minister Kembo Mohadi: No, no, that's not true, that's not true, that's not true. That's not true.
Violet: So what is the truth?
Minster Kembo Mohadi: No, there is nothing. I'm saying that's all false, we don't...
Violet: What about Edward Chikomba the ZBC cameraman who was murdered last week?
Minister Kembo Mohadi: He was murdered by who? Was he murdered by the police?
Violet: But is your government investigating to find out who…
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Was he murdered by the police?
Violet : He was abducted in the same way that several opposition activists have been abducted
Minister Kembo Mohadi : Was he… Abducted by who? By who?
Violet: By members of the state security agency
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Abducted by who? Who? Oh no, can you tell me that? Can you come and
Violet: So is your government going to investigate to find…
Minister Kembo Mohadi: No come and look, ah please can you, if you don't want to talk to me stop giving me false accusations, ah please OK?
Violet: Minister do you understand that…
Minister Kembo Mohadi: No, no, no I don't want to talk to you
Violet: Minister do you understand that Zimbabweans are frustrated with their daily struggles right now?
Minister Kembo Mohadi: Hey! Hey Hey Hey! Shut up!
Sound of the phone line going dead
Violet: But as a Minister, how can you even say that?
Sound of the phone line going dead again
Violet: And the Minister hung up again for the second time and when I tried to call him for the third time he would not pick up his phone. Now Grace, can you comment on this?
Grace Kwinjeh: I think it's such a tragedy for our country to have politicians of such a calibre. Politicians who do not think they have to be made accountable for their actions. Politicians who take journalists or the media for granted, who take the listeners of SW Radio Africa for granted. I think it's really sad but that is part of the whole problem we have in Zimbabwe now, of a ZANU PF leadership that does not think that it has to account to anybody; its own people, the region, or the broader international community. So everything they do is with impunity.
Violet: Right, now before we go to your experience or what happened to you, Minister Kembo Mohadi said that there are no journalists that are currently in detention and I gave him an example of Gift Phiri who was detained last week and he was tortured and he actually received treatment in a hospital in Harare . And then, is it not a fact that there is another journalist, Luke Tamborinyoka who is now the MDC's Media and Information Officer who is currently in detention right now?
Grace Kwinjeh: Yes, apart from Luke I can tell you that when we were arrested on the 11 th March we had two journalists with us. We had you know the photo journalist Tsvangirai Mukwazhi and another Reuters journalist who were tortured for the specific reason that they were journalists. There was nothing else, their torturers identified them as journalists who were taking pictures, who were reporting, and tortured them for that. So the brutal assaults on them, which I saw, which I witnessed, are something that you know I think it's laughable for the Home Affairs Minister to deny that exists. We know journalists are being hunted, haunted in Zimbabwe . We know that they are being tortured and we know that they are being killed.
Violet: And then also coming to Opposition officials and activists who are being arrested and tortured right now. Now you are one of them, one of the Opposition officials that was arrested just recently. Can you tell us what happened to you after you were arrested because the Minister denies that Opposition officials and activists were tortured in custody?
Grace Kwinjeh: We were tortured at Machipisa police station in the fence outside the cells for about four hours by different members of the State Agents. There were CIO's, there were officials from the Army, there were Riot Police and War Veterans. They all took turns to do whatever they could do to us, from beating us up with baton sticks to punches, to being danced on. Mrs Sekai Holland for instance had one official, a woman War Veteran, dance on her and call her 'whore' and all sorts of things. So it cannot be denied that we went through such a horrific experience in the hands of State Agents at Highfields Police Station. And, after that, I was also tortured in the cells and there are witnesses to this in full view of police officials by army officials. That was on the morning of the 12 th of March. And, the Officer who was in charge there at Braeside Police Station, his name is Makore. So again, that's something real that happened and there are witnesses. And, apart from the witnesses, we have wounds, visible wounds that we are being treated for.
Violet: That's what I wanted to find out from you
Grace Kwinjeh: Sekai Holland broke three ribs, broke an arm, broke a leg. I have internal head injuries, I have soft tissue injuries. And you know you saw Dr Lovemore Madhuku, you saw President Morgan Tsvangirai, Nelson Chamisa we know what happened to him, even after the 11 th March, what happened to him at Harare International Airport.
Violet: So in your case, what sort of treatment are you receiving? I understand you are in the same hospital with 64 year old Amai Holland, what treatment is she also receiving if you know?
Grace Kwinjeh: Well, a lot of treatment that includes a lot of therapy because what we went through this is really a nightmare and part of what we are receiving is therapy, de-briefing for us to get – to deal with the trauma. And, we are also receiving specialised treatment. For instance, for me it's the internal head injuries. In Zimbabwe you know they could only scan that I had a swollen brain but did not have the right technology to deal with these. So here again there's the right technology for them to deal with the head injuries and the dizziness that I'm suffering from. Mrs Holland has had two operations so far and she still can't walk by the way. She is still bed ridden.
Violet: And in your article recently entitled the 'Woman in Me' you said you did not cry or beg for mercy and that none of the other victims on that day when you were arrested on the 11 th March cried or begged for mercy or denounced the Party or in any way tried to negotiate a way out of being brutalised. Now, was this position planned beforehand?
Grace Kwinjeh: Was this?
Violet: was this position planned beforehand that people would not cry and you know…?
Grace Kwinjeh: No, everyone was, didn't know they would get tortured. You don't plan torture, none of the people there knew or felt or even could foresaw that we could get tortured. The least we knew was that we would be arrested. The torture and the shock that came with that torture was amazing but not crying really was this just extraordinary strength that just overcomes you. I think it's just something that comes from God you know because these people are really brutalising you, you know, they want to kill, you know the things that they are doing to you. But, it's amazing that of the people who were there, the more than thirty of us, none of the people, everyone just withstood the pain because they would take turns around people, especially around the leadership. If they call up Sekai Holland then they are beating her non stop, then Lovemore Madhuku, Grace Kwinjeh, Morgan Tsvangirai and so on. But you know you just get an extraordinary strength from God. You know something just makes you look at evil in its eye, and you just look at it and bear it and of course they did beat us up like that.
Violet: What did they use when they were beating you and can you identify the attackers?
Grace Kwinjeh: Yes, I saw two of them in Court when we were in Court later on, on the 13 th March. But they were using all sorts of weapons. I was beaten up, for instance parts of my ear came off, they were using a metal bar about a metre long. You know, a metal bar on my head. That's really attempted murder. And I couldn't even see that part of my ear was off until much later when they were secretly transferring us from Machipisa to Harare Central Police Station. So I was bleeding from the head, and I thought it's my head bleeding and then later I touched and I felt this thing sticking out of my ear and it turns out that part of my ear was off. So they were using all sorts of weapons even army belts and then kicks. You know the woman who danced on Sekai Holland was wearing these thick winter boots so you know this was something they had planned in advance. It's hot in Zimbabwe right now, we're in the height of summer and you know she's in these thick, thick long winter boots, the ones you get in the United Kingdom with fur inside. And, she is dancing on Sekai, she danced on William Bango's head. So
Violet : Did these people look like they were intoxicated because you can imagine Amai Sekai Holland is, as I said before, 64 years old, and you can tell that she's a grandmother? Now you know when this woman, this other woman was dancing on top of her and beating her like this, did they look like people who were sober, you know, who really knew what they were doing?
Grace Kwinjeh: It's not about them being sober but it's about it, I think, representing the kind of ZANU PF politics that we have to deal with in Zimbabwe . The level of intolerance, the level of brutality when a regime or a political party is challenged. You know what, the kind of venom you get from ZANU PF politicians, what you got now from Kembo Mohadi, that event there just crystallised all that, just shows you what ZANU PF is and what it stands for.
Violet: And also Grace you wrote in your article, and I quote and you said 'and so, as is the case too often in Opposition politics, the attack on us women was more on our sexuality'. Now what do you mean by this?
Grace Kwinjeh: Yes because it was about our bums, the colour of my hair and different things, being called whores and so on or the husbands, the colour of husbands we have chosen to marry, as in the case of Sekai Holland. But none of the male colleagues were assaulted or insulted in that way. For them it was really political, so if they were beating up Lovemore Madhuku it's because he's leading NCA demos and etc. So, the attack on women, you know, the way rape is used as a weapon. Look at what is happening to women in Sudan for instance. Look at what happens in war situations, the way rape has often been used as an instrument. It'sthe way you know the ZANU PF thugs were using our sexuality against us.
Violet: So do you believe that you were brutalised and treated in this way mainly because you are a woman?
Grace Kwinjeh : Yeah
Violet: I mean do you mean there's a campaign of violence directed against women by the Mugabe regime.
Grace Kwinjeh: Yes. But then, that kind of violence when they call you whores and so on, is also characteristic you know of the misogynistic nature of our environment. The intolerance against women, especially women who come out in leadership or in the public sphere, women who are challenging certain things about the society. And the only way the male colleagues can deal with you is by calling you 'whore', then you are finished, you have to shut up. And, unfortunately that kind of politics is not in ZANU PF alone but you find it even in Opposition politics, you find it even with fellow male journalists, you find it everywhere. The only way to silence a woman is by calling her a 'hure' (whore) and on this day unfortunately it was in such a violent and brutal manner which was really terrible.
Violet: And you know, in a way violence against women goes against our culture and what boys are taught by their parents. Now, it may sound like a repetition but do you believe that the Mugabe regime has to use particular people like psychopaths or youths high on drink and drugs to commit acts of violence against women in this particular case?
Grace Kwinjeh: Yes, I think for them to perpetrate that kind of violence they have to be intoxicated by something and you could see after the four hours the heart beating. You could see later on at Harare Central Police Station for instance when some of them started to sober up, you could see that they were really afraid of what they had done. And that's the unfortunate bit of it, that they are used at that moment and once that really – I feel sorry for the youth, the 16 year olds, 18 year olds, 20 year old youth who are involved in the militia who are given drugs and they carry out these acts of violence, these unlawful acts of violence and then later on they have to face the consequences.
Violet: So what was going through your mind when this was happening?
Grace Kwinjeh: Nothing. You just look at them. Nothing you know, nothing happens, you freeze, everything in you freezes temporarily. And for me, I was tortured on that day and then later on they came to torture me again in the cells. Nothing happens. You know, it's one of those moments that you just stop thinking and look at evil, like I said.
Violet: Now you have made enormous sacrifices, both physical and material, leaving your young family to fight for change in Zimbabwe . Do you wish now that you had taken an easier path?
Grace Kwinjeh: No, not at all, not at all. I think the struggle continues and I think many of the comrades who are in the struggle, many of the comrades I was told that those who are in remand who have been denied bail are actually in high spirits. There's something about it Violet, when you are there Violet and you are feeling it and going through it, there's something about it that just gives you enormous strength and that just tells you that God is on your side. And so, I don't regret it at all, I think that it's really my fate or my destiny, I had to go, that's why I had to go back to Zimbabwe, I had to be part of the leadership at this phase of our political history. And I think it's an important phase because it's going to lead us somewhere and I think that's why the regime is panicking.
Violet: And just before you left for South Africa with Mai Sekai Holland you had been released, you know, to a hospital under Riot Police guard and then you were arrested again whilst trying to leave the country to go for urgent medical treatment in South Africa . How do you interpret the actions of the government then and were you very afraid when you were being denied that chance or that right to leave the country for treatment?
Grace Kwinjeh: Yeah it's scary, it's really scary. What they did is, we were in a MARS Ambulance, so they actually let us get all the way to the airport and it was at the airport that they turned us back. First we had stopped at Harare Central Police station where our lawyers were talking to them trying to negotiate that we had to leave and that there were no charges against us. If you remember that the State could not present its case to the Magistrates' Court so there were no charges, everybody was free. But then, we were told 'no, that was not the case' So we were brought back under police guard, we had to sleep with Riot Police in front of us with guns and having been tortured, you imagine that the people who tortured you are there in front of you and you are trying to sleep. So it's a very nasty traumatic experience which I hope never to go through again in my life. So we had them on 24 hour guard from Sunday up to Wednesday. And then on Wednesday when we managed to get a Court Order that we could leave the country that is when they left and on Wednesday night we managed to sleep well.
Violet Gonda: And Grace what about the issue of the way forward? What are your views concerning the regional initiative to bring the political parties together?
Grace Kwinjeh: I think that's good for the political parties together. In any war situation, time comes when the warring parties have to get together and come up with a settlement. But, what needs to be understood are the basis upon which those parties are coming together and what they have to come up with. We have had the experience of 2000, we've had the experience of 2002, we've had you know numerous experiences where ZANU PF will pretend to be doing something, you know to be negotiating in good faith and yet on the other hand they are in reverse gear to what's being discussed or what is getting agreed upon. So, I think that this time round, and the use of violence as a negotiating tool, I think that is wrong. Because what Mugabe is doing now, he is saying OK I'm going to abduct, I'm going to arrest, I'm going to kill as many people so by the time these folks come and people come round the table you are negotiating and three journalists get killed, not five. You are negotiating that 15 journalists get arrested not 30 and negotiating that the Opposition be allowed to hold rallies under POSA when we know POSA is wrong. So what they are basically doing is raising the tempo so that at the end of the day whatever we get as Zimbabweans, we are so desperate that we say yes this is what we want. But that is wrong.
We want what is basic. We want internationally accepted norms and standards of democratic practice. We don't want you know, mediocrity, the kind of mediocrity that we've been having in Zimbabwe since 2000. I'm here in South Africa ; they are enjoying certain things freely like that. There is an article, for instance, in one of the newspapers today; there is a woman who is complaining that she got her passport after six weeks. This is a passport after six weeks; the public is outraged. In Zimbabwe having a passport has now become a privilege. So we are saying in Zimbabwe we want to live well like in other countries in the region and other countries internationally. But butchering us into succumbing is really wrong and I hope that President Mbeki this time round realises that no, we have to have certain solid understanding of what we want to achieve. Otherwise, like the efforts in 2000 and 2002 nothing much is going to be achieved.
Violet Gonda: Thank you very much Grace Kwinjeh.
Grace Kwinjeh: Thank you
Audio interview can be heard on SW Radio Africa 's Hot Seat programme (Tues 10 April 2007 ). Comments and feedback can be emailed to violet@swradioafrica.com


 


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"THE FUNERAL PARLOUR THAT HAS BECOME ZIMBABWE!"

THE FUNERAL PARLOUR THAT HAS BECOME ZIMBABWE
 
(How do I welcome people at a wake?)
By
Tanonoka Joseph Whande
 
 
I meant to welcome all of us right here a few weeks ago but the evil that is being perpetrated in our country left me shell-shocked. I found us, as a nation, in mourning.
We keep dying and coming back to life. Anyone who never believed in zombies should come to Zimbabwe.
 
It was Frenchman Jean-Paul Sartre who said hell is other people.
 
Are we?
 
The three weeks of madness that the world witnessed in Zimbabwe, only a fraction of decades of torture we in Zimbabwe have endured, should help to make the world understand that Hitler left seeds and had disciples; that many Lucifers are alive and well and living in State Houses.
 
The pictures of the swollen lips and faces of legislators, parliamentarians and leader of an opposition party that you saw came at a price. For you to see that, we had to lose one of our own.
 
I find it just about impossible to believe and accept that Robert Mugabe, a man born of a woman, can be so casual about the lives of fellow citizens.
 
Mugabe has used state funds and apparatus to sharpen the fangs of our youths and then turn them into cannibals. Today, we witness the aging egos of irrelevant manipulators calling upon our children to die and to kill on their behalf as we are shoved haphazardly into a corner like discarded shopping carts in a supermarket parking lot.
 
 Our youths, with insufficient education, jobless, hungry, misguided, desperate and without leadership, have now been turned into connoisseurs of murder and mayhem, preying on fellow citizens, and indeed their own kith and kin, who have not committed any crime against them but who are perceived to have wronged the ageing murderers and thieves in our nation.
 
So, these same despairing youths, from our very own loins, killed Edward Chikomba, just because some washed-up, weather-beaten old scallywag wanted to hide his political poo. Chikomba was killed for carrying out his duties, for informing his own people and the world about the brutality of the murderous Robert 'Pol Pot' Mugabe.
But the scariest thing is the lack of remorse in people, Africans, who were dispatched to assassinate Chikomba. Is this how to fight imperialists or whoever it is the old geezer sees in his daydreams?
 
The ghosts are in the State House grounds and they are not going to let up. The man has killed too many and no human blood can ever be spilled just for nothing.
 
Dust to dust and ashes to ashes, yes, indeed.
 
 But when that dust or ashes have blood of murdered innocent Africans, don't be surprised to see some 'honourables' chasing and swatting imaginary cockroaches in airplanes.
 
Mugabe had to tell his wife and children about Edward Chikomba. He had to say something to them since, to him, Chikomba was a threat not only to the nation, as if the whole lot, including pa himself, are patriots, but to them. The 'First Family' must be smiling as they see one perceived 'enemy of the state' having been decimated and, thus, their welfare, once again, assured.
 
But you do know, don't you, that someone is going to pay for all these heinous crimes? Whether Mugabe dies in office or not these atrocities will be avenged. What Mugabe is doing everyday is to ensure that his family will never live in peace wherever they will end up long after the dictator had been shoved six feet under.
 
I knew Edward Chikomba.
 
I worked with Edward for many many years at the then Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC). He was the technical director on many of my television programmes. I found him there when I returned home from school abroad and I left him there when I was, not surprisingly, forced out of my job. Edward was at the ZBC not because any of those notorious 'chefs' and corrupt party and government 'stalwarts' did him a farvour. He was there because he knew his job and he knew it well. Amiable and a perfectionist, Edward was not the kind of person anybody would have suspected to be manhandled and die in such a barbaric and horrible manner. No one can imagine a government or a president ever doing such a thing to his own citizens.
 
One of our own is down at the hands of a government that is supposed to protect us all. I recall our former colleagues at the ZBC, people like the musical Dick 'Comrade Chinx' Chingaira and Thomas (Tommy) Mandigora, who now represents our nation in Botswana. Tommy and Chinx, is it okay guys?
 
Advise me.
 
What do we do?
 We can't just keep quiet.
 
We are hungry for freedom and deliverance; so hungry are we that we are cannibalizing ourselves to please irrelevant and evil men.
 
Every time I look in the mirror, I smile as I applaud myself for something I consider nice that I might have done. I have caught myself turning my eyes away from the mirror when I recall some not so good deeds that I might have been involved in. A mirror reflects a reality and when one looks into their own eyes, something stirs inside.
Does Mugabe have a mirror in his many residences? What goes on in his mind when he stares at himself?
 
 And what romantic fantasies flow though Grace Mugabe's mind when she looks first at the wrinkled murderer lying next to her and then at the battered body of a dead parent recovered from a bush. How does it feel to her to know that in order for her to enjoy undeserved extravagance, someone's son, father and husband must die? Grace and Gabriel. Such noble names from God's lexicon of decency but yet the twin centres of greed, murder, intolerance and viciousness in a lovely country called Zimbabwe. How come a mother to the nation does not feel compelled to count her chicks only all the time?
 
And to Edward, my dear fellow, I say: 'Rest well, my friend. You can never be forgotten. Not even by Mugabe himself. Mugabe's archives are full of photographs, documentaries and news items that you, yourself, filmed. We will not let you evaporate. You are with us and we are with you. Rest well, my friend. Just remember that some cowards made a hero out of you and we are damn proud of that.
 
 You didn't lose anything, Eddie, but we lost a history maker and Mugabe should remember your overburdened shoulders as you captured him on arrival from Mozambique fooling everybody, including you, about his intentions about Zimbabwe. Like the rest of us, you believed him. Today he has killed you for doing your job so well. You have not lost but we, including Mugabe himself, have lost.
 
From your demise, dear friend, I have learned never to wrestle with a pig because, you see, if you do, you both get dirty. And the pig likes it.
 
We need not fight Mugabe at all. Oh, no, it is not necessary. We just have to remove him. And no individual is working on that, Eddie. Everybody is working on that. You did your part, Eddie. Rest well, dear brother.'
 
The Heart of the Matter....
 
...... is that, because of Mugabe and his shameless popinjays, Zimbabwe has become a funeral parlour. We are being killed by ourselves. It need not be like this. Mugabe is marveling at the resilience of this nation. He came down on it with the entire devil's power and failed. Yet, today, we are passing condolences amongst ourselves. But there is no disease outbreak. There are no flash floods washing away our homes and loved ones. There is only Robert Gabriel Mugabe, ironically named after one of God's more famous and farvourite angels, causing death and destruction. Like that late reggae musician said "Mugabe is doing the devil's evil."
 
I love Zimbabwe.
 
It is a beautiful country full of beautiful people and that has nothing to do with Mugabe.
 
My compatriots, I salute you and please let's meet here often. Let us share ideas. Let us talk to each other. This site is only an enabler. No one is going to talk to anyone. We are going to talk to each other. We have a common goal. Love you lot's and Zimbabwe should be ready for the very first Chimurenga, not the fake chimurengas geared to extol a tyrant.
 
 Brothers and sisters, let's talk!
 
 
I am Tanonoka (Joseph Machenjera) Whande. Over to you!


 


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"CHANGE IN ZIM WILL BE BLOODY!"

Mugabe: The recessional hymn begins

http://obiakpere.blogspot.com/2007/04/mugabe-recessional-hymn-begins.html
WHEN Mr. Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) told BBC's Sunday AM programme a fortnight ago that the political crisis in Zimbabwe had approached its "tipping point", the world was, once more, put on the alert. For all the wrong reasons there are on planet earth, Mr. Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe has forced its way to the front burner of international political discourse, thereby shrinking further, the ailing image of the African continent.
Mr. Mugabe had, in response to mounting opposition to his desire to run for re-election as president next year, deployed, in a most crude fashion, the coercive apparatuses of the state against his compatriots, who legitimately seek change. By the time the dust of the crackdown had settled, Mr. Tsvangirai and Mr. Nelson Chamisa, Member of Parliament, were left thoroughly beaten, with the former's skull fractured. Government has, as it's wont to do, through Mr. Sikanyiso Ndlovu, Minister for Information, since denied state involvement in the incident on BBC Focus on Africa (they have subsequently eaten their own words when it dawned on them that it was just impossible to continue playing the Ostrich).
It was for these - and more, that Mr. Tendai Biti, MDC's Chief Scribe, as Southern African Development Community (SADC) leaders converged in Tanzania (with Zimbabwean crisis top on their agenda), appealed thus: "...we hope they (SADC leaders) will be strong against Mugabe and tell him he has had 27 years of uninterrupted, peaceful rule in Zimbabwe, and should go." Days later, Mr. Mugabe's Party, Zanu-PF, armed him with their presidential flag.
Zimbabwe nay, Africa, does not need a crystal ball to know that tougher and uncertain times await Zimbabweans as they march to their election year 2008. Zimbabwe should face it: the countdown to the zero hour will be painful. It might be bloody also. Liberation, as a matter of rule, comes with a price. The good news, however, is that government's resort to brute force in its desperate bid to quell voices of dissent reveals, quite instructively, the diminishing strength of its semantics, sophistry and pseudo-nationalism preachments, which it had hitherto relied upon to stifle alternative political view points. Owing to this fact, it won't be surprising, therefore, to see a highly inflammable Mugabe in the days ahead, who would not mind razing down the entire Zimbabwean edifice in an attempt to contain the equally highly inflammable temerity of the change agents he restrictively perceives, in error, as mere political rivals.
In fairness to Mr. Mugabe though, what is left of his political ideology is not useless in its totality. For instance, given the historical circumstance of Zimbabwe and her evolutionary process, part of which he has actively been in the past 27 years, Mr. Mugabe's anti-west posture is, in part, justifiable; or, at least, understandable. It is, nonetheless, regrettable that his glaring hostility towards the west runs through the entire gamut of his political philosophy.
Partly justifiable because, it is an eternal truth that the West, from the era of slave trade, through colonialism, apartheid, cold war, to globalisation, had never demonstrated genuine commitment to the Blackman cause. Some Africans, including Mr. Mugabe, wish they did otherwise. But it is a mere wish! Whilst the veiled demand for it is illegitimate, baseless and illogical. Much as we continue to bear the pains of slave trade, colonialism and neo-colonialism with all their devastating manifestations, Africa must realise that what she inadvertently wish for is a subsidy from the West for the former's lack of purpose and self-hate.
Without meaning to hold the brief of the West (and I have argued same elsewhere), what the West have always done is to mind their business without necessarily minding how injurious their minding their business is to the business (if any) of the Blackman. It is, therefore, thought that the failure of the Blackman to erect solid walls around his own business to ward-off usually probable injury arising from the Whiteman's activities should rightly be seen as gross negligence on the part of the Africans.
For, it is escapist for the Blackman to turn around and demonise the Whiteman, who did not flout any enforceable rule but, merely strayed morally. But the Zimbabwean experiment vis-a-vis the perception and attitude of Mr. Mugabe is a lot more complex. Cast in the mould of a purposeful leader, Mr. Mugabe, upon assumption of office in 1980, came across as an articulate, world class intellectual, who could, by sheer display of responsive leadership, differentiate between colonial Rhodesia and a free Zimbabwe. But, like some of his brother African leaders, it did not take quite long for him to set self apart from community. From self-conceit, he slid into power-mania, and further into tyranny. At the moment, he dons the garb of a pseudo-intellectual, and stands out as a good portrait of Africa's leadership failure.
Unfortunately, this bull in Zimbabwe China Shop is still seen as a hero in certain quarters. Unknown to his fan club, the West needs us. They do not wish we perish; rather, they would gladly pay for our preservation so that the exploitation may not cease. Whilst it is our duty to insist on the cessation of the exploitation, we owe it a duty to ourselves and more to posterity to insist on co-existing with the rest of the world without being exploited. Note, however, that refusing to be exploited entails having a good grasp of the dynamics, trends as well as inter-relationship between world politics and economy, with a view to walking away with the most favourable bargain possible. Today's world differ markedly from 1980s; this Mr. Mugabe has repeatedly failed to acknowledge, and it is doubtful he will ever do.
Since breathing facts say the combined result of Mr. Mugabe's famed bravado, economic aluta and unparalleled sense of nationalism is a crumbling economy, the people of Zimbabwe must, while conceding to his legitimate right to fly his party's presidential flag at next year's general elections, take Mr. Mugabe on at the poll. The rest of Africa feel the pains of your ruler's horse-whip; we share in the pestilence that his 27 years in power have embarrassingly become; and we sure reckon that you deserve better.
The task before the Zimbabwean nation is to strengthen opposition by waging a full-scale war against misery, despair, self-glorification and blind despotism. The showdown must commence now.
By Chuks Akamadu


 


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Wednesday, 11 April 2007

ZIM: "THE FAIRY TALE BECAME A GORY NIGHTMARE!"

Zimbabwe: When a Fairy Tale Becomes a Gory Nightmare…
 
April 06, 2007 02:35 PM
The year was 1979 and on Radio Cameroon (there was no TV then) Zimbabwe
was a permanent if not dominant fixture on the international news. The racist Ian Smith regime had been replaced by the black government of Bishop Abel Muzorewa – a suspect government which for all intents and purposes was merely an extension of the racist Smith regime. Zimbabwean nationalists in exile led by Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe fiercely challenged the farce. And the rest of the world agreed. In the end, Muzorewa was dragged kicking and screaming to London for talks at Lancaster House under the auspices of Lord Carrington.
 
One didn't need to be a grown up back then to understand what was at stake; white supremacist rule (hiding behind Muzorewa's black face) vs. black majority rule represented by Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe. How we envied Zimbabwe when the Lancaster talks ended with an agreement for new internationally supervised elections! This was a time when Cameroon was solidly under the control of a dictator called Ahmadou Ahidjo; an era of rule by terror which a generation of Cameroonians cannot begin to relate to and even occasionally romanticize – the result of a quarter of a century of misrule by Ahidjo's successor Paul  Biya….
 
And how we again turned green with envy when Zimbabwe became independent on April 18, 1980 after free and fair elections that saw Mugabe besting his old comrade in arms Joshua Nkomo! Racist Rhodesia was finally dead and black-led Zimbabwe born. Even the great Bob Marley, that immortal icon of our generation, showed up for the party to sing his famous tribute to the new nation: 
 
Every man gotta right to decide his own destiny,
And in this judgement there is no partiality.
So arm in arms, with arms, we'll fight this little struggle,
'Cause that's the only way we can overcome our little trouble.

Natty Dread it in-a (Zimbabwe);
Set it up in (Zimbabwe);
Mash it up-a in-a Zimbabwe (Zimbabwe);
Africans a-liberate (Zimbabwe), yeah.
 
But that euphoria did not last long and the honeymoon was soon over. In 1982 the affable Joshua Nkomo was accused for attempting to overthrow Mugabe's regime. Mugabe then unleashed a six-year reign of terror in Nkomo's native Matabeleland where, according to some estimates, the North-Korean trained Fifth Brigade allegedly killed about 40,000 people – nearly twice the number who died during the war of liberation. Mugabe called the campaign "Operation Gukuruhundi", meaning "the wind that sweeps away the chaff". Zimbabwe had lost its luster. And suddenly, Paul Biya's Cameroon felt a million times safer … and freer!!!
 
No more internal power struggle;
We come together to overcome the little trouble.
Soon we'll find out who is the real revolutionary,
'Cause I don't want my people to be contrary.
 
By the time Mugabe got his way and imposed one-party rule in the late eighties, Zimbabwe was faithfully following that disheartening political blueprint which newly-independent African states used in the 1960s; excessively high hopes at the birth of the nation followed by a short honeymoon; then the imposition of one-man-one-party rule and the jailing of political opponents; the pauperization of the masses and the illicit enrichment of a select few; the institution of a culture of fear and brutal repression; economic stagnation and the collapse of the middle class;  the descent into the abyss and the loss of innocence.
 
To divide and rule could only tear us apart;
In everyman chest, mm - there beats a heart.
So soon we'll find out who is the real revolutionaries;
And I don't want my people to be tricked by mercenaries
 
But the worse was yet to come with the bungled land distribution campaign and Mugabe's maniacal obsession with hanging to power whatever the cost. Whatever one's take on the historical legitimacy (or lack thereof) of the land distribution campaign, it is now evident that this was a fly-by-night operation whose implementation was driven primarily by cynical political and populist motives. This was not a carefully planned program aimed at rectifying the errors of the past and at jump-starting the Zimbabwean economy. The end result is there for all to see. As Zimbabwean Bishops lament in a recent pastoral letter:
 
"Following a radical land reform programme seven years ago, many people are today going to bed hungry and wake up to a day without work. Hundreds of companies were forced to close. Over 80 per cent of the people of Zimbabwe are without employment. Scores risk their lives week after week in search of work in neighbouring countries. Inflation has soared to over 1,600 per cent, and continues to rise, daily. It is the highest in the world and has made the life of ordinary Zimbabweans unbearable…"
 
The downhill slide would continue with the mass eviction of "illegal dwellers" across the country in the infamous "operation Murambatsvina" (get rid of the filth) of 2005. The operation, which had strong political and partisan undertones, only worsened the socio-economic situation in the country. According a United Nations fact finding mission:
 
"It estimated that some 700,000 people in cities across the country have lost either their homes, their source of livelihood or both. Indirectly, a further 2.4 million people have been affected in varying degrees. Hundreds of thousands of women, men and children were made homeless, without access to food, water and sanitation, or health care. Education for thousands of school age children has been disrupted. Many of the sick, including those with HIV and AIDS, no longer have access to care. The vast majority of those directly and indirectly affected are the poor and disadvantaged segments of the population. They are, today, deeper in poverty, deprivation and destitution, and have been rendered more vulnerable."
 
In recent months, Mugabe has upped the ante on political repression and recklessness as he uses every bloody trick in the book hang on to power in perpetuity; the hounding, jailing, torture and even murder of anyone who is rightly or wrongly considered an enemy of the regime is now a national hobby. 
 
Today, Zimbabwe is a shadow of its old self, a fairytale transformed into a gory nightmare right before our eyes. That rainbow nation where black and white were supposed to live happily ever after, where political opponents were supposed to carry on with the business of nation building without fear or repression, is now a distant and even laughable dream. Zimbabwe has gone full circle, right back to the worst days of good old Rhodesia as the Bishops point out in their letter:
 
"None of the unjust and oppressive security laws of the Rhodesian State have been repealed; in fact, they have been reinforced by even more repressive legislation… in particular. It almost appears as though someone sat down with the Declaration of Human Rights and deliberately scrubbed out each in turn. [S]oon after Independence, the power and wealth of the tiny white Rhodesian elite was appropriated by an equally exclusive black elite, some of whom have governed the country for the past 27 years through political patronage. Black Zimbabweans today fight for the same basic rights they fought for during the liberation struggle. It is the same conflict between those who possess power and wealth in abundance, and those who do not; between those who are determined to maintain their privileges of power and wealth at any cost, even at the cost of bloodshed, and those who demand their democratic rights and a share in the fruits of independence...."
 
Zimbabwe, says one news dispatch,
"…is reaching the end game, witnessing the last, desperate throes of a regime that has destroyed one of Africa's few successful economies, plunged millions of people into grinding poverty and led to the deaths of tens of thousands from malnutrition and lack of medical care."
 
This view is shared by the Bishops who warn that:
 
"The confrontation in our Country has now reached a flashpoint. As the suffering population becomes more insistent, generating more and more pressure through boycotts, strikes, demonstrations and uprisings, the State responds with ever harsher oppression through arrests, detentions, banning orders, beatings and torture. In our judgement, the situation is extremely volatile."
 
The Bishops add that what Zimbabwe desperately needs is "a new people-driven Constitution that will guide a democratic leadership chosen in free and fair elections that will offer a chance for economic recovery under genuinely new policies."

For that to happen, African countries, particularly those in the Southern African region led by South Africa, must bring pressure to bear on Mugabe. Unfortunately they have been reluctant to openly take on Mugabe, preferring a failed behind-the-scenes diplomacy that has only emboldened Mugabe.

As we look at the situation unfolding in Zimbabwe we cannot help but be very sad at the lost opportunities, the broken promises and the shattered dreams. When and how will it end? Will Zimbabweans finally get the right to decide their own destiny as Bob Marley urged back in 1979? Will Thabo Mbeki and other African leaders stop pussyfooting and finally live up to their historic responsibility to the Zimbabwean people by calling Mugabe to order? How much longer will this horror movie last?
How much more of this punishment can the people of Zimbabwe endure?
 
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11 comments on this post
Added: April 06, 2007 03:10 PM
Betrayal
Well written Dibussi. As the bishops said,

"The Bishops add that what Zimbabwe desperately needs is "a new people-driven Constitution that will guide a democratic leadership chosen in free and fair elections that will offer a chance for economic recovery under genuinely new policies."

Africa has been betrayed by its leaders many an times and Mugabe is just the in guy right now. Until we get constitutions with checks and balances that ensure the common citizens rights are protected and the power of a president diminished, we will always have to rely on a leader's personal integrity. Out of the continent you get both Nelson Mandela and Robert Mugabe and that is just too high a price to pay with each leader coming into power.
By:  
Joshua
Added: April 06, 2007 05:08 PM
True Zimbabwean
My brother do not be fooled by the whiteman's propaganda. Zimbabwe is fully behind President Mugabe and we back his every move. We'd rather be ruled by Mugabe for a thousand years than let our country fall in the hands of sellouts. Let the true African spirit prevail for the greatest battle is yet to be seen. Icho!
By:  
Mudiwa Charamba
Added: April 06, 2007 05:47 PM
Mudiwa
Are you trying to tell me you are fully behind Mugabe and everything is good over there? Is the media lying to us with all the information coming out of Harare or the refugees running to neighboring countries?
By:  
Hubert
Added: April 06, 2007 06:06 PM
Why do all Mugabe supporters always assume that any analysis that is not favorable to Mugabe is the white man's propaganda? Why not deal with the issues raised? The Matabeleland massacres did not happen? The campaign against the squaters was a Western invention? And have Zimbabwean bishops all become whire men? And all those bloggers blogging from within Zimbabwe are just crazy?

Mugabe is the worst thing that ever happened to Africa and most of us rational folks do not need a whiteman to point that out to us.
By:  
Aloku
Added: April 06, 2007 06:13 PM
Well said Aloku
Well said Aloku. Mugabe and a number of Africans use the white man for all their failings. "Our transportation system is not working"

The white man is the reason.

"Our children don't have enough to eat."

The white man is the reason.

Last time I checked, Mugabe (black man) was running Zimbabwe. To keep blaming others is a sign of irresponsibility and one of the worst traits a leader can possess. We need to grow up and do better!
By:  
Joshua
Added: April 06, 2007 06:55 PM
"Glow" Zimbabwe
Good points all, we are not behind Mugabe, Mugabe is evil. If there were free and fair elections (preferably where the dispora could vote) he would be gone. This is not the case. I so hope it is the case someday.

Also, whatever did happen to all of those poor youths abducted from the Glow last week? They have vanished, which is concerning...
By:  
Economic Mip
Added: April 07, 2007 01:15 AM
Don't blame the West, blame Mugabe
Well written! It's a shame that post-colonial Africa is ruled by despots like Robert Mugabe. It's easy to blame the former colonists but Mugabe is ultimately responsible for what has happened in Zimbabwe. Words like greed, corruption and intimidation aptly describe Mugabe and his Zanu-PF cronies. Sadly the Zimbabwean people and most African peoples in post colonial Africa, suffer at the hands of power hungry, dictators who care less for their own people than the colonists.
By:  
Kimberly Ba
Added: April 07, 2007 07:20 AM
So much propaganda
It seems that most commentators are simply buying the bogus news reports from Zimbabwe that are written by person and organizations that are being financed by the US and UK.

The issue is that Mugabe took back land from whites and they are all up in arms over this.

All the other excuses people are giving is just to cover up their racist US/UK financed agenda. There are corrupt governments the world over that are well supported and financed by the US and UK once they do their dirty work.

To them Blacks must never try to remove White Supremacy.
By:  
Emil
Added: April 07, 2007 07:25 AM
What does Zimbabwe deserve??
Zimbabweans deserve Mugabe. there is no point in crying about the melt-down now. Zimbabweans get the leader they deserve and they definitely deserve Robert Gabrielle Mugabe. So stop complaining and get off your pathetic backsides and help Robert do what he does best with his degrees in violence.
Even SADC love Mugabe. If fact all Africans love Mugabe that is why it is OKAY for blacks to beat, bash and kill blacks. So stop complaining and get on or get out. Zimbabwe only needs half it's population according to zanupf, so get out if you don't like it.



By:  
Tichaona Zunga
Added: April 07, 2007 10:43 AM
An Unexpected nightmare in a wealthy and economic power house in Africa
It never rained but it is actually a 'come and see' political derby and civil strife in the all time peaceful but dictatorial Zimbabwe under R Mugabe.I am still visualising the end of time sooner for the innocent indegenes who are mostly the scape-goats in this sacrament of politcal misunderstanding.There is little doubt that countries like if countries like Zimbabwe,Ivory Coast,Zaire and host of other hitherto peaceful nation could fall short of expectations then Africa is heading to a chaotic political doom.These were the countries to set a good example of peaceful settlement of conflict and a new method of conflict resolution that donnot need voilent reproaches.

It will be a mistake to say other countries like Cameroon,Ghana and bunch of other 'peaceful countries' will follow suit.Little doubt that there is bond of contention and political strife in other African countries but what remains is the final pitfall of voilence and civil war.I pray for a change of mentality from the African s alike for this method of expression of grievance go a long way to bring poverty,inflict suffering,pain and hunger to the poor refugees.A message to all African leaders to stop voilent and misleadership which hamper smooth development,and increase the pangs of our African predicament in all African countries.
By:  
Fritzane Kiki
Added: April 08, 2007 01:27 AM
True Zimbabwean
Mudiwa your brain is full of mud. In 100 years there will be no Zimbabweans left let alone 1000 years. Mugabe is the worst leader of a country the world has had. He sits by and watches 1000's of his countrymen and women starving to death as well as the cruelty he inflicts on them. I hope in the near future a true Zimbabwean is elected as President, one that will take care of his fellow men and woman and one that will restore Zimbabwe to its once beautiful self. I hope one day again blacks and whites will be able to live, work and socialise in peace and harmony.
By:  
Anne Johnston
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Peace and Tranquility???
Peace and Tranquility???
 Cell in RSA: 0791463039
 


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NOT THE TIME TO LOOK JOVIAL....

NOT THE TIME TO LOOK JOVIAL....
....BUT WELL THERE YOU ARE! "CHEESSSEE!"

VaRadical Soldier ku Joburg pa"Anti-Mugabe" demo!

VaRadical Soldier ku Joburg pa"Anti-Mugabe" demo!
Tichasvika chete!

"....zvama 'dhisnyongoro'....!"

"....zvama 'dhisnyongoro'....!"
The same demo in JHB...more on www.fozc.blogspot.com