BABA JUKWA: Obituary for my party
BABA JUKWA: Obituary for my
party
Zimbabwe, when I look back along the
path we walked from Independence Day 1980 to today, I can’t hold back the
flowing tears. It is hard to write an obituary for a party that I have been
part of for my entire life - and now I am helping to dismantle. It is like a
jersey infested with lice. The only solution is to burn it. Haudzipedzi
kutswanya inda dzacho! Who would have thought at 1980 that Zimbabwe would be
like this?
Two things
describe why my party is in this situation: Chi-shefu, which is the appetite to
want to be hero worshiped and averse to criticism; and Cronyism, which is
rewarding those who turn a blind eye to evil but are quick to hero worship the
leader. The effect of these was felt throughout the country and I will observe
it in stages, tears running down my cheeks.
Agriculture
Our economy was mainly Agro-based
and so I don’t dispute that we needed to address the land issue. Although it
pains me to say so, Ian Smith’s agricultural policy was one of the best, love
him or hate him. The guy had devised methods to prevent soil erosion in the
whole country by putting in laws that prohibit random agricultural activities
at water channels or near rivers.
He also
introduced a mandatory contour digging programme throughout the country. Our
people hated this and the song “Nhamo Yemakandiwa” came out of this hatred. But
little did our people know that it was for their benefit and during the war, we
were stupid enough to gain cheap political millage at pungwes ordering people
to destroy those makandiwa. Now rivers are all sand, most areas in the former
TTLs are just gullies and with dry rivers comes drought. Smith also made sure
that cattle would dip every week and he collected cattle taxes, something which
our people also did not like. Selling one’s agricultural produce or cattle was
done in open markets or auctions and people got value for money for their hard
work.
Nobody
listened
The first land reform programme
yielded very little for the country. Some money was thrown here and there with
Britain saying they paid £64 million so that we could buy land and redistribute
it to poor black people. But all the prime land went to us the chefs. I got
mine for free but I warned people in my party that this system does not work.
One day it will explode but no one listened to me. We needed to identify real
farmers so that we don’t disturb agriculture. But no one listened. So all of us
in the first Cabinet, Politburo and Central Committee got free farms. A few
from the former ZAPU also got their free bits. The useless land was then given
to the few junior party members who wanted to use it. But still the objective
was the same, to reward people in my party for loyalty to the Chef, my party
leader and the military system that he was creating for his own personal
security while some of us were made to make do with very little security unless
we were ministers.
Industry
& Commerce
Love him or hate him, Smith had
managed to build a solid economy under sanctions and had also managed to find
ways of beating the sanctions. We hit him hard when we bombed the BP Shell
tanks in Salisbury which later forced him to negotiate with us at Lancaster
House, but his economy was good. The Rhodesian Dollar we inherited was strong.
We called it the Zimbabwe dollar. The exchange rate in 1980 was one dollar to
one pound. Don’t listen to my party cry crocodile tears about sanctions. The
only thing we achieved was to find a scapegoat in the form of sanctions but my
party destroyed a thriving industry that we inherited from Smith. High
inflation started company closures, unemployment, social chaos and of course
you all know that we helped form MDC through our mismanagement of the economy.
Politics
Since the time of the liberation
struggle, our people have not rested. They were beaten, killed during the war
by our troops for sometimes flimsy excuses of being witches or traitors. Some
overzealous mjibhas were complicit in the torture of our people. And we did not
stop this until now. We only extended the methods of torture and murder and
included rape of women as punishment to anyone who does not like our party.
So the
people of Matebeleland think that they are the first to be victims of torture
and murder by my party. No, it started way before 1980. During the war, rape
was structured because our troops could sleep with any girl they liked in the
villages, VanaChimbwido. We the chefs were also helping ourselves with girls at
refugee camps in Maputo and elsewhere. I don’t want to open old wounds Vana Ve
Zimbabwe, but this is fact. Any parent who refused to hand over their daughters
to Pungwes would meet death. And attending pungwes was compulsory and I guess
you still see this disease by my party up to now. The mixture of socialism,
which we knew little about but just adopted to please the Chinese and North
Koreans, and capitalism, which we admired, contributed to the destruction of
the economy. It was like mixing a donkey and a lion. It failed. So Gukurahundi
and all the evil things that happened in our country have their roots in our
activities before independence and also the one party state idea which aimed at
making our leader Mugabe a God, like what we were witnessing in North Korea
being done to the late Kim Ill Sung.
Up to now,
Mugabe still dreams of that, that’s why anyone who has cheated him by praising
him has been rewarded heavily. Ask “Obedient son” Obert Mpofu how all of a
sudden he found himself surrounded with diamond money. We will discuss our
vision for a new Zimbabwe together next week, but for now Zimbabwe go en masse
to vote the people in and my party out. Victory is certain and we will defend
our victory with our blood.
- Asijiki, Ndatenda, Baba Jukwa
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