Dabengwa Takes Aim At Mnangagwa
27 December 2017
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ZAPU president Dumiso Dabengwa is maintaining his onslaught on the new government led by Emmerson Mnangagwa saying the new political dispensation was no different from the old order under Robert Mugabe.

The former Cabinet minister who was a guest at an event organised by pressure group Ibhetshu Likazulu to mark Gukurahundi on Unity Day here said there was nothing new about the new government as it was just the same old “gang” that led the post-independence atrocities.

“We continue to suffer silently, we continue to live in fear and the same crocodiles that devoured our people are still in power, they recently changed faces and names, the system and the attitudes simply mutated yet remain the same,” Dabengwa told the gathering.

“We have continued to suffer in silence simply because those who butchered our people, maimed our mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters, raped our sisters and mothers destroyed our property are in charge of State power and they continue to frustrate every effort that we make to express the pain and grief that we are harbouring within ourselves,” he said.

The former chief of intelligence in the Zapu military wing said Gukurahundi was never put to an end by the signing of the Unity Accord.

“Gukurahundi did not only leave permanent scars nor did it end by the signing of the Unity Accord, it simply mutated from being direct violence into structural and systematic violence underpinned by grossly centralised system of governance that is grotesquely corrupt and self-serving, characterised by gross marginalisation of the same communities that were affected by Gukurahundi,” he said.

Dabengwa added: “Thousands of our people were never accounted for, they lie in mass graves scattered around the country and their families have lived in trauma for the past 35 years, seeking closure but being denied every opportunity for truth recovery and transitional justice.”

This, he said, was the reason why they have called the establishment of a National Peace and Reconciliation Commission in terms of the Constitution and for its operationalisation if “Zimbabwe is to move forward and we begin an inclusive nation building project.”

But above all, the former Home Affairs minister said he has never respected the Unity Accord, since it was meant to serve Mugabe’s interests.

“The Accord was in actual sense not a fair arrangement but a zero sum that benefited Mugabe in person and Zanu more than the people of Zimbabwe.

“It created the sad era our history that of a one party state whose agenda was to further the interests of Mugabe and Zanu at the expense of democracy and the people of Zimbabwe, contrary to what we had spent our lives in the bush fighting for,” he said.

“The Accord was not only a zero sum agreement but it was a culmination of the very reason why we don’t celebrate the day but mourn the loss of our loved ones who were mercilessly massacred by the Fifth Brigade, their crime being supporters of Zapu and of belonging to a certain tribe.”

This also comes at a time Dabengwa set August 2018 as a date for the reburials of Gukurahundi victims.

“…let’s agree that soon after the rain season around August to October we go and collect all the bones on the mass graves and give them a decent burial,” he said adding that they no longer needed any government approval.

“We already have pathologists on standby to help with identification. We have many of them who have been highly trained to do that and are willing to assist. We know by law we should ask for permission from government through the ministry of Home Affairs but that will not do, for they were given 30 years to do the right thing but they ignored. So this time around we are doing it our way. No one will block us,” Dabengwa declared.

 

Hope for Gukurahundi victims

AN EVENT meant to remember victims of the Gukurahundi atrocities was allowed to go ahead on Friday without any hindrance, raising hopes that the government of President Emmerson Mnangagwa might address this thorny issue after more than three decades of dithering.

Under the autocratic rule of former president Robert Mugabe such an event would have been crushed by police, which made the Gukurahundi issue a taboo during his reign.

However, under the new political dispensation, Mnangagwa seems to be doing things differently from his predecessor despite being accused of having played a blinder at the height of the atrocities.

The commemorations were organised by pressure group Ibhetshu Likazulu.

By 9am, nearly 100 people clad in black had gathered at Joshua Mqabuko Nkomo statue in the Central Business District before they marched to the Stanley Hall where presentations and testimonies were made.

Those who spoke to the Southern News on the side-lines of the commemorations shared mixed feelings about Mnangagwa’s new approach towards this emotive subject.

Political activists Fortune Mlalazi gave credit to the determination of those pushing for national healing.

“The government had no choice; you cannot continue suppressing people, you stop at a certain point,” Mlalazi said.

“It’s not about the State but the determination of the people themselves, that regardless of what the State or police say or do people have always been determined to put forward their agenda,” he said adding that he was not expecting much of change of tact on Gukurahundi “as most people who were involved are still in government.”

Alliance for National Salvation president Moses Mzila Ndlovu said the development was a sign of the beginning of a new era.

“While it does not mean much in terms of our freedom to express ourselves, this could be the beginning of an end of repression,” Mzila Ndlovu said.

“I don’t want to be optimistic to say this means now we are free to express ourselves; it may not be, it’s just because of the transitional nature of our government, let’s just wait and see,” he said.

Mthwakazi Republic Party president Mqondisi Moyo said government was forced to give in due to pressure.

“What we have been pushing for is unstoppable because we believe that even if the government wants or not, we have to do it, it’s for us and not for the State,” Moyo said.

“Even if they had blocked us we were still going to do it. I don’t expect anything from this government in as far as addressing the Gukurahundi, because Mnangagwa recently said let bygones be bygones of which he is simply saying Gukurahundi is bygones.”

Zapu youth leader Ndodana Moyo expressed hope in the new government.

“At least it shows that this government is reforming. In the past we have had challenges whenever there were such commemorations.

“But what we want is for government to set up a truth, peace and reconciliation organ that can deal with this matter once and for all. It shouldn’t be a taboo to commemorate our fallen ones.” – Daily News

 

 

12 Replies to “Dabengwa Takes Aim At Mnangagwa”

  1. that is a wrong mentality bro, that is not about Shonas, i think as people in Zim we miss the point especially when it comes to tribes, unless you have only Ndebele relatives and you dont have Shona relatives then you can say that, i believe that everyone is a human being regardless of tribe, what was done to Ndebeles it is equally to Shonas, they are Shonas who lost their relatives during Gukurahundi. its not only Ndebeles,

  2. If Shonas choose to keep quiet about their own relatives deaths; thats their problem. Not ours!

  3. how i wish the truth and reconciliation it can take place, the sooner the better, so that we can breath a fresh air and have a way forward as a country, this Gukurahundi its a thorn in the flesh and it is holding the progress of the country backwards, i just feel pity for ED, he must just address this issue once and for all ,so that he can concentrate to run the country without any issues hanging over him, every corner they talk about Gukurahundi.
    Can someone come especially from our Elderly people, i thought Dabengwa will approach it in a different way, but he is behaving like us Povo, actually he should lead this in an intelligent way, not haphazardly like us Povo, am really disappointed about his thinking, they are so many killings and people disappearing during the 2008 elections, no one is talking about it, many people died as well during that time.

    please we need elderly people who can think and reason so that they can drive the Gukurahundi killings, instead of dividing people, they must bring people together, we need such elderly people.

  4. I had respect for Dabengwa but I am feeling that he is getting lost. Instead of preaching unity he is trying to divide and create hatred among Zimbabweans.Lets not revive memories of 1890s as we also know what happened Lets forgive and forget and move forward and rebuild our nation.
    Give the President a chance as he can not solve problems created in 37 years over night. Some people want to sabotage

  5. Yes. So why are you not identifying your culprits and witnesses?

    Who is stopping you from starting with the madzwiti atrocities?

    Go ahead; you are most welcome. Dont expect us to do it for you. Do it for yourselves like we are doing it for ourselves!!

  6. Dumiso ,you have just lost out ,we respected you zapu ,zanu and zimbabwe as a nation,but you fast loosing it out as an elderly responsible statesman.You are just bent on trying to take advantage of the ugly atrocities of gukurahundi to further your now far fetched aspirations of becoming the head of state of zimbabwe.I am sorry ,you fast loosing it,,the once much respected ,one of the intelligent persons in zimbabwe,I would suggest you take a visit o Kigali,Rwanda and see how they dealt with even a far horrible case than Gukurahundi.MAKE IT A CASE STUDY.Of course i am not trying to belittle gukurahundi ,equally bad but on different scales

  7. Maybe it is indeed sour grapes after being left out but the Gukurahundi issue should be addressed. There are so many distortions now about Gukurahundi to a point where a young white boy was heard saying “Mugabe killed 20,000 white people” while one dull ZanuPF supporter told his listerners that the Rhodesian army carried out the Gukurahundi atrocities.

  8. This is too much hatred. Dumiso must wear an elderly hat and lead from the front. He must equally carry the blame as he was one of the masterminds of that rebellion. Gukurahundi is forever a problem that visited the people of Zimbabwe. Its foreclosure must be collective effort. The hard lessons learnt must help us condemn such acts forever.

  9. No No Zipra Intelligence Supremo this is just sour grapes after being sidelined for the much talked about VP post which never was, try writing nooks on how to participate in a guerilla war of liberation and then get dumped.

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