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Massacre claims add to Mugabe’s pains

Opinion & Analysis
JOHANNESBURG — Australians usually cause headaches for Zimbabwe in rugby and cricket. Now, though, recently declassified Australian diplomatic documents are resurrecting ghosts President Robert Mugabe’s government would have preferred to remain locked away.

JOHANNESBURG — Australians usually cause headaches for Zimbabwe in rugby and cricket. Now, though, recently declassified Australian diplomatic documents are resurrecting ghosts President Robert Mugabe’s government would have preferred to remain locked away.

It all goes back nearly 32 years.

On February 3, 1983 in southern Matabeleland two young pregnant girls were shot dead, and their wombs split open. Months before the girls had been raped for several days by members of the Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA), who then left the Neshango village area by helicopter.

It was an atrocity that would shock even those most hardened to the depths of cruelty humans are capable of, but it was only one in a line of similar horrors enacted in western Zimbabwe and parts of the more central Midlands.

Villagers were forced to dig their own graves and then shot into them; others burned to death in dwellings as they pleaded desperately for their lives, an old lady raped in her hut then set alight with a plastic bag, the agony of which killed her three weeks later.  

A year-old child was kicked by soldiers’ boots, breaking his back, a man savagely beaten breaking his every bone until he was “like a cloth”, a four-month infant axed three times, a mother forced to eat the flesh of her own child.

These were just some of the horrors recorded in the western region of Matabeleland in 1983 to 1984 by the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace (CCJP) and compiled in 1997, their commission which is now being directly linked to president Robert Mugabe.

The brutality, which also included the deliberate starving of the population, was largely carried out by the feared North-Korean-trained 5 Brigade (or Fifth Brigade), the deal for its formation having been signed in October 1980 by Mugabe, who had just become premier.

The 5 Brigade “passed out” in December 1982 and was first deployed the following January in Matabeleland North, the support heartland of the opposition Zimbabwe African People’s Union (Zapu). Supported by intelligence operatives and the army, it would go on to unleash deep terror, even going back for retraining at intervals.

Zapu had in April 1980 lost the first post-independence elections to the splinter Zanu PF, led by Mugabe. But a sustained spate of resulting violence,  including assassination attempts on the new premier, was perceived by the new government as the poll loser seeking to gain power by unconstitutional means.

A lot of the justifications for the resulting crackdown — which was blamed on Zapu’s activities — were later found to be the handiwork of South African agents, including the defining discovery of arms caches in Matabeleland.   Few absolve the horrors meted out on locals by dissidents who were claimed to be backed by the opposition, but they enjoyed little local support and were largely former combatants cut adrift by Zapu, and thus looking to preserve themselves, following a failed demobilisation and integration into the arm.

The CCJP, one of the few rights groups active in Zimbabwe, found that two conflicts essentially existed — one between the dissidents and government forces, and another between agencies and regions seen as supportive to the opposition.

The Harare regime was successful in meshing the two, such that the dissidents were seen as backed by Zapu, whose bedrock of support was in Matabeleland.

The 5 Brigade, which reported specifically to the government, was part of the response in crushing all opposition to the ruling Zanu PF.

By the time a deal was signed in 1987 between Mugabe and Zapu leader Joshua Nkomo, the CCJP confirmed at least 3 000 undoubtedly dead and nearly 5 000 tortured, in what are referred to as the Gukurahundi massacres, which means “the rain which washes away the chaff before the spring rains” in Shona. 

This is only those who can be reliably accounted for, the often-mentioned number is in the region of 20 000 Ndebeles, who are the majority occupants of Matabeleland.

It remains an emotive near-taboo issue rarely talked about in Zimbabwe; a stifling web of silence woven around the events of those five years, but once the surface is scratched, the pain runs deep.

Nearly half of those killed were breadwinners, scores simply disappeared with their families left with not even the consolation of a body to bury, thousands were maimed for life, the psychological trauma unmeasurable.

The Mugabe government has long denied any role, with several senior figures queuing up to absolve the regime of any involvement. In September 1983 a commission of inquiry was constituted to probe the atrocities; over 30 years later its findings are yet to be made public.

Mugabe’s only reference to the killings, made at the 1999 burial of arch-rival Nkomo, were that they were a “moment of madness”. In 1992 Zimbabwe Defence minister Moven Mahachi wrote in a local daily that “events during that period are regretted and should not be repeated by anybody, any group of people or institution in this country”.

Mahachi died nine years later in a car accident, the events around which have remained the subject of public conjecture.

But recent official comment has been harder to come by, until Phelekezela Mphoko, one of the two vice-presidents, in February termed the massacres a “Western conspiracy”. There is very little published academic research on the events in Matabeleland.

But new information about the those dark days is trickling into the public domain. It could provide an unwelcome headache for Mugabe (91), who has been fighting to put down an internal ruling party succession struggle.

Newly declassified Australian government documents cited by an independent historian suggest the president, some of his ministers and senior army officials were closely involved in the planning and execution of the atrocities.

Dispatches from Harare to Canberra in 1983 show how Zanu PF ministers Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was at the time intelligence chief but is now Mugabe’s deputy, then Defence minister Sydney Sekeramayi and the late Justice minister Edson Zvobgo were aware of the mass killings, which were allegedly meant to author a one-party State.

The Australian cables reportedly reveal that embassy officials had met with Cephas Msipa, the former governor of the Midlands, and who revealed that Zanu PF ministers had told him that the massacres were planned by the party’s central committee.

“He (Msipa) had talked earlier with Legal and Parliamentary Affairs minister (Zvogbo) and later lunched with him,” the embassy dispatch reads.

“Zvobgo told him of the decision of the central committee that there had to be a massacre of the Ndebeles.”

Msipa is said to have emphasised the word “massacre”, revealing that the killings were carefully planned and executed.

Once the killings started, Zvobgo is said to have told Msipa that Perence Shiri, then commander of the 5 Brigade and now boss of the Zimbabwe air force said “politicians should leave it to us”.

Sekeramayi is said to have told Msipa that he had preferred a political solution to the situation in Matabeleland.

“Another member of the High Commission was told by Msipa at the residence (presumably the residence of the High Commission) on March 5 that Sekeramayi had said that not only was Mugabe fully aware of what was going on — what the 5 Brigade was doing was under Mugabe’s explicit orders,” read the cables.

Msipa, whose account is said to be credible in view of his amicable relationship with Mugabe —he shared a room with the president during their earlier careers as teachers, and also housed him in 1960 — is said to have suffered a crisis of conscience as he was at the time a member of government, other Zapu members having been purged.

The historical documents said to reveal the government’s complicity have been highlighted by independent historian Stuart Doran, who is the author of a forthcoming book — Kingdom, power, glory: Mugabe, Zanu and the quest for supremacy, 1960-87.

Doran says the documents include diplomatic correspondence, intelligence assessments and raw intelligence gathered by spies recruited from within the Zimbabwean government, and are augmented by the “testimony of Zimbabwean witnesses finding courage in old age”.

He refuted the foreigner agitation claim. “The killings were a thoroughly internal affair,” Doran says. “They were neither provoked nor sustained by outsiders.”

It is notable that when the atrocities began coming to light leading to international pressure, the massacres moved from village settings to more covert detention camps, the largest of which was Bhalagwe, which at its high in 1984 saw thousands being trucked into its hundreds of holding sheds.

When contacted by our sister publication Mail & Guardian on the latest revelations, Msipa refused to comment or talk about Gukurahundi, saying the matter was too sensitive.

It may be a tactic that will be employed by the Zimbabwe hierarchy in coming weeks, as more uncomfortable details are made public, but few will doubt they are further stirring up demons long-thought buried. — Mail & Guardian Africa