The Citizen (KZN)

‘Zimbabwe needs TRC’

- London

– The Archbishop of York, John Sentamu, put on his white cleric’s collar yesterday for the first time since cutting it up 10 years ago in a highly symbolic protest at Robert Mugabe’s rule.

The Uganda-born cleric, the second-most senior clergyman in the Church of England, made the dramatic gesture on live television in 2007 and stated that he would not wear it again until the Zimbabwe president was gone.

After Mugabe left office this week, Sentamu appeared on the same BBC programme where he was handed the pieces of his collar, only to pull a new one out of his pocket and put it on.

“I think the lesson for Zimbabwe is the same. They just can’t try and stitch it up. Something more radical, something new has to happen in terms of the rule of law, allowing people to get jobs,” he told The Andrew Marr Show.

“I promised when Mugabe goes I [would] put my collar on, so I have no choice but to put it back on. Mugabe has gone but the new president has to remember something more new than simply stitching up a thing will work.”

Sentamu said Zimbabwe needed a kind of truth and reconcilia­tion commission like that seen in South Africa – and that Mugabe should ask for forgivenes­s.

“Mugabe at some point needs to say, ‘people’ of Zimbabwe, 37 years [ago] I took on a country that was fantastic, I nearly took it to ruin. Zimbabwean­s forgive me’,” he said.

Many Zimbabwean­s have celebrated Mugabe’s departure but fear new President Emmerson Mnangagwa – until recently one of Mugabe’s closest allies – could also lead an authoritar­ian regime.

“It is quite possible that Emmerson Mnangagwa could actually be a very, very good president. But he can’t simply bury the past. It won’t go away,” said Sentamu, 68.

He became the Church of England’s first black archbishop when he was enthroned in November 2005. On the BBC show 10 years ago, he held up his collar, saying it was what he wore to identify himself as a clergyman and snipped it into bits with scissors. – AFP

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