The Citizen (KZN)

SA needs peace in Zimbabwe

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There will be those who cheered the explosion at a Zanu-PF rally in Bulawayo in Zimbabwe on Saturday, allegedly an attempt to assassinat­e President Emmerson Mnangagwa. In Bulawayo, capital of the southern province of Matabelela­nd, Mnangagwa – who replaced Robert Mugabe after the latter’s military engineered ousting late last year – is a hated figure. As former head of the Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on, he is accused of playing a major role in the deployment of the North Korean-trained Five Brigade into the province from early 1983. The troops were, ostensibly, sent in to counter the activities of armed dissidents, who were responsibl­e for a number of acts of terrorism and sabotage.

The nickname of the unit, Gukurahund­i (a Shona expression meaning the wind which blows away the chaff ahead of the rains,) indicated the operation was closer to ethnic cleansing than to a military counteratt­ack.

Up to 20 000 Ndebele people were slaughtere­d in the campaign, thousands more were tortured or detained and thousands fled into exile in neighbouri­ng Botswana and South Africa. The scars of that killing and the diaspora which followed are still evident today.

The attack on Mnangagwa is worrying, from a broader perspectiv­e. Clearly, the ghosts of Gukurahund­i have not been laid to rest. Also, there is a growing secessiona­ry spirit among some in Matabelela­nd, who believe themselves oppressed by the Shona-speaking majority, which runs the ruling Zanu-PF. Mnangagwa hasn’t helped things by sticking to his denials that he had anything to do with the killings in the 1980s.

If people in Matabelela­nd believe they can resort to violence, they will be fatally mistaken. They will get no support for insurrecti­on and will be crushed again.

And South Africa will have to deal with the fallout as more people stream across the border.

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