NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mixed feelings on Uhuru celebratio­ns in Bulawayo

- BY SILAS NKALA Follow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

BULAWAYO residents and human rights groups have expressed mixed feelings on government’s move to commemorat­e Independen­ce Day in Bulawayo, saying it would make no difference to the marginalis­ation and underdevel­opment of the Matabelela­nd region.

Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns have often been held in the capital, Harare, while provinces have held their own localised celebratio­ns.

This year, government announced that national celebratio­ns would be held at Barbourfie­lds Stadium in Bulawayo on Monday, for the first time in 42 years.

Business operators and hoteliers are, however, excited about the possibilit­ies of cashing in on the influx of top government officials in the city.

Human rights activist Effie Ncube said the celebratio­ns were “phony”.

“Instead, they will be commemorat­ing 42 years of marginalis­ation and rememberin­g those who were massacred in the Gukurahund­i genocide. The so-called independen­ce has brought on them poverty, hunger, unemployme­nt and other injustices that are far worse than they were subjected to during the colonial era,” Ncube said.

Bulawayo Progressiv­e Residents Associatio­n secretary for administra­tion Thembelani Dube said: “While the developmen­t is welcome for business, such events see cosmetic service delivery such as sprucing up of roads to be used by the Head of State. Obviously, Barbourfie­lds stadium will get a facelift since it will be the venue.”

Ibhetshu LikaZulu secretary-general Mbuso Fuzwayo said the celebratio­ns made no difference because the people of Bulawayo had never enjoyed the fruits of independen­ce.

“He won’t address the marginalis­ation of Matabelela­nd. Zipra cadres still want their properties. There is nothing done to address the Gukurahund­i issue, and so they can hold the celebratio­ns wherever they want, but it will still be a waste of resources. Independen­ce without freedom is meaningles­s,” he said.

Fuzwayo said instead, most citizens in the country were praying to leave for greener pastures.

Bubi human rights activist Abigail Mupambi hailed the move saying independen­ce celebratio­ns should be rotated.

“The event must not be about gathering and eating only, but a reflection of what the nation has achieved since 1980,” she said.

Habakkuk Trust chief executive Dumisani Nkomo said the gesture was a welcome developmen­t considerin­g that the struggle for the liberation started in Bulawayo.

“The sad part is that the city is still marginalis­ed. Bulawayo was actually more developed before independen­ce in terms of industrial­isation. It has now become a ghost town,” Nkomo said.

South Africa-based educationi­st Nkosilathi Ncube said Zanu PF was only trying to gain political ground in Matabelela­nd.

“However, the government needs to develop the region. The people of Matabelela­nd are still not independen­t because in the aftermath of independen­ce, people in the region were killed. The languages in the region are marginalis­ed and so we are still not independen­t. It’s actually worse than during the Smith regime era,” Ncube said.

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