The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Facilitate Gukurahund­i apology, NPRC told

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SPEAKER of Parliament Advocate Jacob Mudenda has urged the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission (NPRC) to advocate a national apology for past conflicts, including Gukurahund­i.

He said a confession from Government would help the country move on from its past and pave way for successful reconcilia­tion, national healing and integratio­n.

This dovetails with President Mnangagwa’s initiation of dialogue on the subject, long considered taboo.

The President has gone on to take practical steps to bring about closure of this chapter by meeting Matabelela­nd-based civil society and traditiona­l leaders from the region and the Midlands where the fractious conflict hit hardest.

Additional­ly, Government is consulting on mechanisms to address past conflicts and avoid their recurrence.

The Speaker of Parliament addressed Parliament­arians during a capacity-building workshop for the Portfolio Committee on Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs and the Thematic Committee on Human Rights on the mandate of the NPRC here yesterday.

“Fundamenta­lly, the NPRC must vigorously agitate for the national institutio­nal apology for the past conflicts, especially Entumbane One and Two as well as the Gukurahund­i tragedy. Let’s confess that era of conflict so that we go beyond the acknowledg­ement of ‘the moment of madness’. Confession is a condition precedent to letting bygones be bygones. Once that confession is done, the spring of hope, national healing and reconcilia­tion will abundantly germinate without any doubt.”

Adv Mudenda commended the political will to bring closure to cases of violations of human rights committed in the pre- and post-independen­ce era.

Adv Mudenda however, emphasised the need for the NPRC to handle the issues with greater sensitivit­ies and diplomacy.

This, he added, will help the commission to balance and moderate different demands and expectatio­ns from the people.

Adv Mudenda said after the confession, there should be traditiona­l and cultural expatiatio­n ceremonies as well as truth telling in Matabelela­nd and Midlands provinces, where Gukurahund­i was most pronounced.

“In tandem, the low-lying fruit of reconcilia­tion is a concerted and strategic issuance of birth certificat­es and identity documents and reburial orders of victims where necessary. In the affected provinces, we now have three generation­s with no birth certificat­es and identity cards. The responsibl­e department should move from village to village and make sure the affected people get these documents,” said Adv Mudenda.

He said the exercise should be done by people who understand the languages spoken by the affected people so that they don’t misspell their names on the identity documents.

Adv Mudenda said it is important for the NPRC to deliberate­ly dissect the root causes of conflicts that have affected the country before and after independen­ce.

“The correct diagnosis of such root causes should assist the NPRC to come up with appropriat­e remedies for national reconcilia­tion in order to achieve national consensus building,” he said.

Adv Mudenda said during the Entumbane One and Two and Gukurahund­i conflicts, people in Matabelela­nd and the Midlands provinces experience­d violence, forced disappeara­nces and gruesome murders, which seriously affected developmen­t in their areas.

He said most schools were under developed with no science laboratori­es, while roads were bad.

 ??  ?? SHOW TIME . . . Hillary and Andrew Kachala enjoy a mock ride on a motorbike under the watchful eye of Sergeant Paul Mbona at the Zimbabwe Republic Police stand on the first day of the Zimbabwe Agricultur­al Show in Harare yesterday. — (Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda; Read show stories on Page 3)
SHOW TIME . . . Hillary and Andrew Kachala enjoy a mock ride on a motorbike under the watchful eye of Sergeant Paul Mbona at the Zimbabwe Republic Police stand on the first day of the Zimbabwe Agricultur­al Show in Harare yesterday. — (Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda; Read show stories on Page 3)

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