The Herald (Zimbabwe)

INSTAK updates President on museum project

- Herald Reporter

PRESIDENT Mnangagwa’s special envoy on the Museum of African Liberation, Ambassador Simbarashe Mumbengegw­i, has updated the President on progress made on the pan-African project which is aimed at documentin­g the continent’s struggle for political and economic emancipati­on.

Ambassador Mumbengegw­i has to date engaged nearly 20 countries as part of the Second Republic’s drive to engender internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the implementa­tion of the project.

Ambassador Mumbengegw­i this week presented to President Mnangagwa, a report on his latest engagement­s with the heads of secretaria­ts of the African Union (AU) and the Southern African Developmen­t Community (Sadc).

The Museum of African Liberation is the brainchild of the Institute of African Liberation (INSTAK) and is part of the institute’s 103-hectare Liberation City in western Harare.

President Mnangagwa has designated INSTAK’S Liberation City, a priority project, and has appointed Ambassador Mumbengegw­i, Zimbabwe’s former Foreign Affairs Minister, as his special envoy to cultivate transnatio­nal collaborat­ion on its implementa­tion.

On January 25 2024, Ambassador Mumbengegw­i met the chairperso­n of the African Union, Commission, Mr Moussa Faki Mahamat, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and delivered a special message from President Mnangagwa. Accompanyi­ng the Special Envoy was the chief executive officer of INSTAK, Ambassador Kwame Muzawazi.

At the meeting at the AU headquarte­rs, Mr Mahamat and Ambassador Mumbengegw­i discussed how the continenta­l body could collaborat­e with INSTAK on taking the

Museum of African Liberation forward.

The museum project, as well as another signature INSTAK undertakin­g — The Africa Factbook — dovetails with AU developmen­t aspiration­s as captured in Agenda 2063 within the context of the Great African Museum and Encyclopae­dia Africana.

After the fruitful discussion­s between Mr Mahamat and Ambassador Mumbengegw­i, the Special Envoy presented the AU Commission chair with a Presidenti­al edition of the Africa Factbook.

On January 29 2024, the Special Envoy and Ambassador Muzawazi were in Gaborone, Botswana to engage Sadc executive secretary Mr Elias Magosi on how the regional bloc could participat­e in the Museum of African Liberation.

Ambassador Mumbengegw­i delivered a special message from President Mnangagwa, and also presented Mr Magosi with a Draft Memorandum of Understand­ing to guide collaborat­ion on the museum project.

The special envoy conveyed Zimbabwe’s desire for all Sadc countries to participat­e in the Museum of African Liberation, highlighti­ng that the project was in line with the bloc’s objective to enhance and consolidat­e the historical, social and cultural heritage of the region’s peoples.

“Magosi highlighte­d that the project resonates with the region’s objectives, amongst others the operationa­lisation of the mechanism to recognise and honour the founders of Sadc for their contributi­on to the establishm­ent of the organisati­on and pursuit of regional integratio­n,” a report on the Sadc website says.

The report also said, “In this regard, further engagement­s regarding the project and MoU, as well as follow-ups, will be conducted between Sadc and INSTAK in collaborat­ion with the Zimbabwean Embassy in Botswana.”

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