The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Fare thee well, Lord Carrington

. . . peer who played midwife to Zim’s birth

- Sifelani Tsiko Senior Writer

Lord Carrington took total command of the talks, demanding that warring parties adhere to an agenda that he drafted and insisted on firm commitment­s from both sides on each issue.

THE recent death of the last surviving member of Sir Winston Churchill’s postwar government and former UK foreign secretary, Peter Carrington, evokes memories of the famous Lancaster House talks of 1979 which he chaired and led to the independen­ce of Zimbabwe.

When he assumed the foreign secretary’s job after 1979, his first major task was to end the protracted armed guerrilla war against Ian Smith’s government in Rhodesia and pave the way for multi-racial elections.

Many will remember that the Lancaster House talks, which he chaired in 1979, brought the various parties together and led to the birth of Zimbabwe.

The talks were tough and bitter with warring parties fighting to push forward their competing agendas and interests.

No matter the criticism that was piled on Lord Carrington, he won admiration for pushing the bargaining process further than any of the succeeding prime ministers and foreign secretarie­s who had grappled with Rhodesia question since 1965 when Smith declared independen­ce, commonly known as UDI.

Analysts at the time said his ability to steer the Lancaster House talks that ended with an agreement endeared him to then British prime minister Margaret Thatcher.

He became the closest Cabinet adviser and a “real power in Conservati­ve Party politics” despite the fact that he never sat in the House of Commons.

Lord Carrington was said to have succeeded to the title at 19 years of age, and that barred him from elective office.

Some recall him as a man who had inner toughness to handle tough diplomatic issues for the UK then.

It is said that Lord Carrington’s first major battle was to persuade Mrs Thatcher not to recognise the short-lived government of then prime minister Abel Tendekai Muzorewa.

His second major task was to convince Commonweal­th leaders and the warring parties in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia that it was worth one more serious attempt to negotiate a settlement, and thirdly to prevent the Lancaster House talks from “degenerati­ng into a formless series of ill-tempered debates”, as some political analysts at the time put it.

“His strategy for the negotiatio­ns grew out of his conviction that the principal British mistake in the past had been to act as a referee between the combatants. This time, he told associates, Britain would let them all state their case, then draft the best possible compromise and offer it to them, take it or leave it,” wrote one political analyst, R. W. Apple, in an article in October 1979.

Lord Carrington took total command of the talks, demanding that warring parties adhere to an agenda that he drafted and insisted on firm commitment­s from both sides on each issue.

All this took time when all the parties to the long-running war for the independen­ce of Zimbabwe were under pressure to settle.

The Frontline States were also piling pressure on the Patriotic Front to stay put at the talks while the war-weary white Rhodesian settlers in Salisbury wanted recognitio­n more than anything else and the British longed for an end to the war.

He had a tough job handling Patriotic Front firebrands such as Eddison Zvobgo, who is remembered for his mastery of verbal warfare skills at the Lancaster House Conference in 1979.

About 10 days before the signing of the Lancaster House Agreement, Zvobgo is said to have raised tempers when he told Margaret Thatcher to “jump into the Thames”.

Zvobgo at this crucial moment is also said to have insinuated that Thatcher was having an affair with “Satan Botha” - PW Botha - who was then South African prime minister.

In later years, one Zimbabwean political analyst recalled: “When Zvobgo felt that Lord Carrington, who was chairing the Lancaster peace talks, was trying to extract too many concession­s from the Patriotic Front without correspond­ing pressure being applied on Ian Smith and Abel Muzorewa, he lashed out: ‘If Carrington carries on the way he has begun, plotting with puppets, we will go back to war’.”

Patriotic Front leaders were all clear in their demands for land and the return of the country to its rightful owners. They never wavered from this stand. Pressure was mounting for all parties. “The year 1978 was rather unique in that it was characteri­sed by the formation of the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia regime, the bombing of multiple refugee camps and bridges by that regime in neighbouri­ng states, the shooting down of two civilian Air Rhodesia aeroplanes by ZIPRA, a rocket attack on oil tanks in Salisbury by guerrillas, completely destroying them. By the beginning of 1979, it was quite clear that the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia administra­tion was staring inevitable military defeat in the face,” wrote renowned Zimbabwean historian Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu.

With pressure mounting, Lord Carrington was forced to reassure veteran Zimbabwean nationalis­t Joshua Nkomo and Patriotic Front leaders that the British would sooner or later give Rhodesia back to its indigenous people - the Africans.

“Did Nkomo want the country to be surrendere­d to the Africans as the British found it or as they amalgamate­d it later?

“Nkomo replied very emphatical­ly and emotionall­y that he wanted the country to be returned to the black people as a unitary state, and that the British government should not disunite the black people of Zimbabwe by balkanisin­g their country,” wrote Apple.

In 2017, when former president Robert Mugabe met with Sir Nicholas, he reminisced on the role Lord Soames played in overseeing the transition to Zimbabwe, adding that “he had handled a very difficult situation which was tension-ridden”.

At the time he also reminisced over his reaction when Lord Soames told him to form a government after resounding­ly winning elections in 1980.

He said Lord Soames told him that in constituti­ng his Government, he should bear in mind there were “good white Rhodesians”.

 ??  ?? FLASHBACK . . . Lord Carrington (directly behind the microphone) smiles at UANC leader Abel Tendekai Muzorewa (to his right) during the Lancaster House talks in 1979. At the other end of the table are then Patriotic Front leaders Joshua Nkomo and...
FLASHBACK . . . Lord Carrington (directly behind the microphone) smiles at UANC leader Abel Tendekai Muzorewa (to his right) during the Lancaster House talks in 1979. At the other end of the table are then Patriotic Front leaders Joshua Nkomo and...
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