MAYHEM IN MUTARE: MUGABE IN MICROCOSM
The demise
of Robert Mugabe’s gangster rule, after 37 years, is no guarantee of any
improvement for that country, once considered the jewel in Africa’s crown.
An incident
in Mutare (formerly Umtali in Rhodesian days), a delightful eastern highlands
city of Zimbabwe, during a stay in 1986, epitomised the excesses of the
regime’s long misrule and the area’s dramatic history.
During the
last days of Ian Smith’s government in the Bush War of 1972-80 the beautiful
tree-lined streets of Umtali came under mortar and rocket fire , from the
adjoining heights, of neighbouring, and
Marxist, Mozambique.
With
majority rule in 1980 came a temporary peace for the 70,000 people of this
city.
However peace
in Mugabe’s state was always illusory for both black and white citizens and
seeing the impact on a community of the gangsterism of his ruling party,
ZANU-PF, was educational, to say the least.
On February
16th of that year, a 500 strong mob descended on St John’s Anglican
Cathedral, and other church premises, assaulted parishioners and priests while
the police looked on.
The
spiritual heirs of the mob that once supported Barabbas, 2000 years ago, were
there at the behest of the local strong man, Edgar Tekere (1937-2011), the
local chairman of the party in Manicaland.
This
historical cameo gives ample proof of the breakdown in the rule of law of a
beautiful country.
Tekere was a
cabinet minister in the early days of the Mugabe Government and no stranger to
controversy. Charged with the murder of a white farmer, Gerald Adams, he was
controversially acquitted and although sacked from the cabinet continued on as
political power broker.
On the day
he organised his rent-a-mob he arrived at the Cathedral and entered. Invited to
attend the service and restrain the chanting mob he declined on both counts. In
fact he went outside and invited the mob to take over. They did.
Pews were
over turned, two priests assaulted-one being dragged down the full length of
the church on his face, children thrown around and an old lady severely
buffeted and carried out in shock.
The mob then
danced on the altar and drank 16 bottles of altar wine. The Dean, John Knight
and 20 parishioners stayed behind to see what the mob wanted. No clear picture
emerged except false stories told to the squatters at St Augustine’s Mission
that the Bishop wanted the land they were on for his own for his own
(non-existent) cattle.
The police
declined to intervene because it was “Tekere business” and “orders from above.”
The Asst
Commissioner advised Dean Knight to move leave his home as Tekere had ordered
an invasion of it.
Later the
same afternoon two church members were captured outside the church’s office and
assaulted by Tekere while held by his henchman. Police watched as those two
victims were hurled into a car and taken away.
The bishop’s
house was over run and stayed that way. When, after four days passed, a female
SPCA inspector went to feed the dogs and chickens, she was forcibly evicted
before being able to tend to the animals.
Mob rule
ended on March 2 when the police were granted permission to move in against the
thugs.
The matter
did not end there, On Sunday, March 16, 1986, Dean Knight was contacted by a high ranking
member of the politbureau, Didymus Mutasa, Speaker of the House of Assembly.
Mutasa
informed the cleric that he had been responsible for critical international
exposure the country had received on the BBC.
Accordingly,
the Dean no longer felt safe in his own home and again vacated it and went into
hiding. He was incommunicado during my visit and there were many fearful
parishioners.
The
background, to this madness in Mutare, centred over a dispute relating to
control over St Augustine’s Mission School and its rebel headmaster, and
Anglican priest,Keble Prosser.
Prosser
belonged to the Community of the Resurrection, a British missionary organisation
active in Rhodesia/Zimbabwe for, at that stage, 80 years. In September 1983, the
mission pulled out and control of the school was handed back to the Diocese of
Manicaland.
Prosser was
recalled but did not go back as expected. As a ZANU-PF supporter during the
Bush War he had local village support and also from Tekere.
When the
diocese appointed an African headmaster, the lorry containing the new principal’s
goods was turned back by the mob.
Mugabe, (then
PM), sent a letter in January 1984, instructed Bishop Elijah Masuko and his
school governors, to retain Prosser.
Prosser in
the middle of the year then chose a new
board without reference to the diocese. This comprised of local villagers,
despite the fact that only five per cent of the pupils were locals, as the
school was a national institution.
The
compromise reached left the school with two boards of governors, including one
of the country’s leading witchdoctors -
a novel touch for a Christian school!
Apart from
some commentary on the BBC there was a near deafening silence from the local, national
and international media.
At the time
the Deputy PM, Simon Muzenda, said the police had done their job lawfully and
fairly and that they could hardly take sides in a purely administrative wrangle
of the Church.
A pity the
sorry cabal of criminal cranks that constituted Mugabe’s ministry didn’t heed
the grandiloquent words of one of their ministerial colleagues, Herbert Ushewokunze (once under parliamentary investigation,and
attack, for railway property fraud), who
told a Police Seminar (2/11/82), grandiloquently: “the police must respect
liberty and the freedom to exercise one’s rights without hindrance provided the
rights of other people are not invaded. The police have the paramount ethical
and legal duty to ensure that law enforcement is carried out impartially and
equally without regard for social standing, race or class. There should be no
favouritism towards those of influence (be it political, social or economic)
and neglecting the less able and less influential.”
The Mugabe
regime, both in the relatively forgotten case relating to the mayhem in Mutare,
and on so many larger issues, remains the antithesis of those words throughout
the long era of corrupt misrule.
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