Teachers face fresh violence

Zimbabwean

6 November 2010

Teachers are facing renewed threats of political violence from war veteran who have so far forced the transfer of six teachers, according to the Progress Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ).

PTUZ secretary general Raymond Majongwe told a press conference in Harare last week that his organisation had received reports of teachers being victimised since the day President Robert Mugabe announced that elections should take place next year.

Six teachers from Gwangwava Primary School in Rushinga were recently forcibly transferred to other schools in Bindura after war veterans and Zanu (PF) supporters said they did not want the teachers in their community.

The six, who are all PTUZ members consist of two couples, one male and one female teacher.

According to Majongwe, PTUZ feared for the reachers’ lives because the district education office in Bindura, working in cahoots with the war veterans, transferred the six to Zanu (PF) strongholds so that they could ‘fix’ them.

We want to put on record as an organisation that the situation in and around schools is starting to disturb us,” Majongwe said.

He said teachers were being victimised at a time when the GNU (Government of National Unity) was showing obvious signs of cracks. He said Zanu (PF) supporters led by war veterans had threatened to cleanse the Mashonaland province of any members of the PTUZ.

We don’t need this. It is unnecessary and uncalled for,” Majongwe said. “What we have is a serious challenge around the failure by government to address teachers’ salaries. This election that is coming will not solve any problems facing teachers, infact the election will increase grave yards and orphans.”

Majongwe said his organisation had written to Education Minister, David Coltart to intervene. They were also planning to approach Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai so he can talk to Mugabe to convince his supporters to stop harassing teachers.

Zimbabwean teachers, especially in rural areas, have over the years been the target of political violence by war veterans and Zanu (PF) supporters who accuse them of supporting the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).

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I can be Education Minister – Chinotimba

Newsday

By Veneranda Langa

6 November 2010

War veterans leader Joseph Chinotimba will happily take up the ministerial portfolios of either education or lands but says he would never dream of becoming President of Zimbabwe because that would take him “more than 3000 years” to achieve.

Chinotimba told Newsday in an interview in Harare this week that incumbent Education Minister David Coltart was unsuitable for the position because, by virtue of being white, the only culture that he could teach Zimbabweans was “European culture of homosexualism”.

Chinotimba said he is on a warpath against Coltart because of the Minister’s recent statements condemning the ban of artistic works debating the mass murder that took place in the south-western parts of Zimbabwe in the early 1980s describing the massacres as genocide.

As a result, Chinotimba said Coltart was not fit to be a Cabinet minister and he (Chinotimba) should take over his office, if need be, by force.

“There is no culture that a person like Coltart can teach the children of Zimbabwe, otherwise it would be the European culture of ‘homosexualism’,”he said.

Chinotimba has since written to Coltart demanding that he apologises to the war veterans for allegedly saying Gukurahundi was tantamount to genocide and threatened that if the Minister did not apologise within seven days beginning Wednesday, war veterans would visit and eject him from his offices.

“Mr Coltart, your utterances have automatically invited war veterans to your office and we are therefore coming there for explanations. Indeed, you owe us and all Zimbabweans an apology,” read the letter. Coltart yesterday confirmed receiving Chinotimba’s later but said he had no apology to make.

“All I can say for now is that I have received the letter and I will not make any apology,” said Coltart.

“I can be an MP, Senator or Minister – especially the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture because it would be a very good post for me,” said Chinotimba. “I cannot be a president myself because it will take me 3000 years to be at that level.”

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Letter written by Senator David Coltart to Chairman of Zimbabwe Liberation War Veterans Association

NOTE: This is the letter I wrote in reply to the letter sent to me on the 4th November 2010 which was delivered to the Association’s offices on the the 5th November 2010

5 November 2010

Mr. Mpofu

Provincial Chairman

Zimbabwe Liberation War Veteran Association

Harare Province

Cnr Jason Moyo and 4TH Street

Harare

Dear Mr. Mpofu

REF:  YOUR LETTER DATED 4 NOVEMBER 2010

I refer to your letter dated 4 November 2010.

I was misquoted by NewsDay in so far as their Headline is concerned. In this regard, I attach a copy of the actual speech I gave which I trust will set the record straight. Amongst other things, you will note that I made reference in it to the Nyadzonia Massacre and to my concern that human rights violations of the past, including the colonial era, have not been adequately dealt with in my view.

In my view, human rights are universal, eternal and sacrosanct and whenever they are breached, men and women of goodwill have a duty to speak out against such breaches.

For the record, I was never a member of the Selous Scouts or any unit of the army. I was a member of the British South Africa Police (BSAP) having been conscripted by the Rhodesian Government (as applied to all white 18 year old men). As my speech (and many others I have given) makes clear, I strongly believe that racial discrimination and many other actions of the Rhodesian Front Government were unjust and wrong. However, we now all have an obligation to reconcile and move forward in the best interests of our beloved Nation and her future- which predominantly rests in all our children. As my speech makes clear, if we do not deal with the mistakes we have all made in the past in different ways, then our Nation will be doomed to repeat them in future.

Yours Faithfully,
Senator David Coltart

MINISTER OF EDUCATION, SPORT, ARTS AND CULTURE.

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Schools Demand US$300 for 2011 Grade One Places

Herald

5 November 2010

Harare — Most Government primary schools in Harare’s low-density areas are reportedly charging parents seeking Grade One places as much as US$300 for 2011 as registration fees.

Investigations by The Herald yesterday also revealed that the charges do not include school fees or other levies.

The charges do not even guarantee the affected children a place at the school if other requirements are not met.

Parents yesterday expressed outrage at the charges, saying schools were trying to profiteer from desperate parents.

Government has in turn condemned this demand of registration fees for Grade One pupils.

Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart yesterday said he would issue a full statement today.

He, however, discouraged schools from charging registration fees.

“The only fees that parents are required to pay are school fees and levy. Registering a Grade One pupil is not supposed to be charged,” he said.

Such primary schools as Avondale, North-park, Blakistone and Selbourne Routledge were identified as some that are charging the registration fees.

Staff from the cited schools that declined to be named, yesterday confirmed the registration fees, arguing the schools came up with such initiatives as a way of raising standards.

t was also established that most of the schools in low-density areas were also charging the registration fees.

The charges have courted the wrath of several parents with children starting school next year, with some parents describing the stringent conditions put in place at some of these schools as a clear demonstration that they did not want children from affluent suburbs to mix with poor children.

“I wanted to enroll my child at Northpark Primary School, but I cannot afford the registration fees they are demanding.

“I cannot send the child to any school in the high-density areas because I stay in this suburb where I work.

“All the same, I cannot afford to source for transport money for the child to attend other schools,” he said.

Another parent who refused to be named said she was asked to pay US$200 registration fees, fill a form and wait for confirmation.

“I have been advised to pay up by December 31 or the place would be forfeited with no refund,” she said.

Secretary for Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Dr Stephen Mahere is on record discouraging schools from charging the registration fees.

He also encouraged the schools to apply to the ministry for approval through their provincial education offices.

The school can apply to charge provisional or deposit fees or levies for registration.

Government has outlawed the charging of registration fees.

Schools are, however, allowed to use the zoning system where children from a certain suburb cannot attend another in a different zone.

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Letter to Senator David Coltart by Zimbabwe Liberation War Veterans Association

NOTE: Verbatim copy of a letter written to Senator Coltart and delivered to his offices on Thursday 4th November 2010

ZIMBABWE LIBERATION WAR VETERANS ASSOCIATION

Harare Province

Cnr Jason Moyo/ 4th Street

Harare                                                             mobile 071 2 359 548

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

04 November 2010

DAVID COLTART

(Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture)

AmbassadorHouse

Kwame Nkrumh Avenue

HARARE

RE: YOUR COMMENTS IN THE NEWSDAY- 1NOVEMBER 2010 ISSUE:- OUTRAGEOUS AND AN INSULT


Minister Coltart, you will never cease to amaze!!

As the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association Harare Chapter we read with shock and horror your utterances and comments in the NewsDay Monday 1 November 2010 issue under the headline; ‘It was genocide- Coltart’ which can be best interpreted as despicable attack on War Veterans and all Zimbabweans. In no uncertain terms, your utterances are unacceptable and an insult in our country’s liberation struggle, national rconciliation and the legacy of national independence.

It is quite preposterous in the extreme for you to preach about human rights violations and post independence disturbances putting into cognizant your background as a former member of the brutal and murderous Rhodesian Selous Scouts whose indisputable agenda was to entrench the ideology of white supremacy over blacks by torturing, maiming and killing of freedom fighters. Isn’t it known by everyone that the Rhodesian Selous Scouts and the Rhodesian Front committed some massacres and atrocities in and outside the country whose combined toll is yet to be fully appreciated? Who doesn’t know that as an active member of the Selous Scout, you were responsible for the ruthless killing of freedom fighters and innocent Zimbabwean refugees in camps in Mozambique and Zambia? We would like to merely remind you that the Rhodesian Selous Scouts and Rhodesian Infantry were terrorising and subjugating blacks in this country in the vein hope of defeating the liberation war. Wasn’t all this genocide?

By virtue of your unacceptable background a former active member of the Rhodesian Selous Scout, you are least qualified to comment on the Matabeleland post-independence disturbances and the so-called human rights violations- which in actual fact do not exist. What human rights and abuse of power are you talking about? As one of the oppressing white minority and a former Rhodie, you benefited under the then Prime Minister Robert Mugabe’s reconciliation policy. Isn’t this absurd? Why are you poking your nose in matters that concern blacks? Remember there is an adage which says; If an owl live together with chickens, it does not mean that it is also a chicken. It is quite amazing to hear you talk of setting up a truth, justice and reconciliation process. You cannot tell that nonsense to War Veterans, who surely know better and to scores of Zimbabweans who suffered from untold torture and killing from 1890 to 1980 melted against them by your forefathers and other Rhodies. Mr. Coltart, even fools knows very well that your hands are dripping with blood of many freedom fighters. Let it be known to you that because of your pre-independence wicked atrocities ad massacres, you can never be a champion of democracy and human rights. Why are you silent on the atrocities and massacres you committed during the pre-independence war? What happened to the likes of Mbuya Nehanda, Sekuru Kaguvi, Edison Sithole, Jason Moyo, Herbert Chiptepo and Alfred Mangena just to mention a few?

Mr. Coltart, your utterances have automatically invited War Veterans to your office and we are therefore coming to your office for explanations. Indeed, you owe us and all Zimbabweans an apology. In a thousand years, we will never forget your roll in the Rhodesian Selous Scout and by invoking old memories, we cannot continue folding our hands and watch former Rhodies willingly insulting us. Your utterances have given us second thoughts on those white farmers who are still on our land. It is crystal clear that some former Rhodies in the likes of Bennet and yourself are not even apologetic of their unacceptable background. Shame on you Coltart!! We have had enough of your nonsense and we can longer brook in any more.


In view of the foregoing, we want an apology from you and withdraw your statements within seven days or else you should resign from your post as the Minister of Education, Arts, Sports and Culture. Suffice to say you are not even the right incumbent for the post as you are not even conversant with our culture as blacks. What we know for certain is that you are conversant with Western culture amongst them being homosexuality which, your colleagues in the West, are advocating to be included in our Constitution, but happily, the people of Zimbabwe are out rightly denying.

If by any chance, you were misquoted by the press, let us know in writing because we are really upset with your unapologetic behaviour, which we, as War Veterans, can not just allow to slither into the back of our minds unchallenged.

FOR AND ONBEHALF OF THE ZIMBABWE NATIONAL LIBERATION WAR VETERANS ASSOCIATION HARARE PROVINCE.

…………………………………..

CDE MPOFU

(PROVINCIAL CHAIRMAN)

…………………………………

(SECRETARY GENERAL)

………………………………

(CDE J. CHINOTIMBA)

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Resentment broods in MDC-M over Sibanda replacement

Financial Gazette

4 November 2010

By Levi Mukarati, Senior Political Reporter

THE Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-M) has formally written to President Robert Mugabe informing him of its selection of Moses Mzila Ndlovu, the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, as a replacement of the late Gibson Sibanda in the Organ on National Healing, Reconciliation and Re-integration. Sibanda, the late deputy president of the smaller faction of the MDC led by Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara, succumbed to cancer in August this year.
But it emerged this week that there is disgruntlement among some executive members and supporters of the MDC-M over the promotion of Mzila Ndlovu, who will assume a full ministerial post once his selection has been okayed by the President.
The Financial Gazette has established that party members linked to Deputy Prime Minister Mutambara are opposed to what they see as Mzila Ndlovu’s handpicking by MDC-M secretary-general, Welsh-man Ncube, and are pushing for a common position at the party’s next meeting.
Ncube is said to be in the running to succeed the MDC-M leader at the party’s next elective congress. Those opposed to the elevation of the Bulilima West House of Assembly member are accusing Ncube of trying to reward his faithful ahead of the party’s congress next year.
It is understood Ncube is lining up his lieutenants for various posts amid reports that the party spokesperson, Edwin Mushoriwa, could take up the MDC-M’s vice-presidency while Priscilla Misihai-rabwi-Mushonga could become secretary-general, deputised by Mzila Ndlovu. Misihairabwi-Musho-nga is currently the deputy secretary-general of the MDC-M.
Minister of Education, Sports, Arts and Culture, David Coltart may be seconded for treasurer-general while national chairperson, Joubert Mudzimumwe, could be replaced by former Zengeza legislator, Goodrich Chimbaira.
“Mzila Ndlovu has been over-shadowed in the ministry by Simbarashe Mumbengegwi of ZANU-PF that is why Ncube wants him to get a post where he can be visible and groomed for a senior position at the party’s congress next year,” said the source.
Ncube, who is believed to command support from about eight provincial structures, confirmed this week that the issue was now at the presidential level, but refused to name the person to take up the office left by the former MDC-M vice-president.
“We are pushing for that appointment because we believe the Organ on National Healing and Reconciliation is very important. Yes, we discussed the issue after Cabinet and the President’s Office assured us they are now looking at the best possible time to swear in our new member,” said Ncube.
“Unfortunately, I cannot give the names that are playing around because that is a prerogative of our party president, but I should say we will meet soon just to finalise on the issue before President Mugabe makes the formal appointment.”
Hardliners in the party, which broke away from the mainstream MDC in 2005 after disagreements over contesting in Senatorial elections in March that year, are heavily criticising Deputy Prime Minister Mutambara for what appears to be his endorsement of ZANU-PF.
The deputy premier recently shocked members of his party after supporting President Mugabe’s unilateral appointment of ambassadors to a number of countries in Europe and South Africa.

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Munya Chidzonga and national ideology

Herald

Opinion by Alexander Kanengoni

3 November 2010

We are used to young people of his age who, when thrust in a similar situation outside the country, find it easier to condemn their country because we all know, that is the language the West wants to hear to grant them the permission to stay.

THE stunning performance by Munyaradzi Chidzonga at the recent Big Brother Africa reality show in South Africa has become a talking point of some sort.
While the bigger part of the nation is celebrating this huge personal achievement, there is a section of the media that seems surprisingly unhappy about the celebrations.

First of all, it must be appreciated that when Munyaradzi expressed his desire to meet President Mugabe because he confessed the man was his hero, there is no doubt he said it from deep inside his heart.

When his fellow housemates nicknamed him the Diamond Boy and the Son of the Soil, it was because of the explicit love that he showed for his country. The fact that most of the time, he went around draped in Zimbabwe’s national flag sealed the strong connection between him and his country.

Most of us celebrated that love for his country together with him. And apparently, the rest of Africa too. He was a surprising and refreshing difference.

We are used to young people of his age who, when thrust in a similar situation outside the country, find it easier to condemn their country because we all know, that is the language the West wants to hear to grant them the permission to stay.

Therefore, when President Mugabe granted the young man his wish immediately after touching down at Harare International Airport from Johannesburg where he had incredibly lost to Uti, the Nigerian, he received him as the President of Zimbabwe and not as the leader of Zanu-PF.

There can be no doubt about that. And even before that, when flamboyant businessman Philip Chiyangwa and Cde David Chapfika arranged to raise funds to reward Munya for his sterling effort, they did not do it as Zanu-PF functionaries but as ordinary citizens of Zimbabwe. Most of us did not see anything wrong or partisan about those gestures.

So when the editor of The Independent, Constantine Chimakure, said, two issues ago, that the conflict in Zimbabwe has become glaringly ideological, he was right.

In fact, to most of us, that is how it has always been. Most of us totally agreed with him when he said we should develop a national and not partisan ideology. I will keep repeating that people did not go to war to perpetuate the colonial state model but to change it.

The biggest change would be to alter the fundamental relationship between the previously marginalised blacks and the economy, beginning with the land. The Lancaster House Agreement forced the perpetuation of the colonial state for the first 10 years.

That was the time you heard some whites going around saying: “If we had known this was what you wanted, we could have given you the country without the fight.” That was bragging.

When we eventually changed the Lancaster House constitution to acquire the land by decree that fundamentally altered the relations between the people and the economy.

We were at last moving out of the colonial state model and of course, that movement was ideological; it would face fierce resistance.

The same applies to the current Indigenisation and Empowerment Act that seeks to give locals 51 percent shareholding equity in commerce and industry. It is such movement, such a change in relations of production, that Vladimir Lenin, in State and Revolution, described as a “revolution”. Because there would always be forces fiercely opposed to the change, just as it was during the war to free the country, the change could cost lives.

That is why I was taken aback a bit to find the word “revolution” used so liberally in the current issue of the Jesuits’ monthly publication, Mukai, a conservative publication by all accounts. I came across the word several times. What was the word “revolution” doing in the extremely conservative, priestly magazine?

I once made what I believed was an honest and innocent contribution to the magazine supporting, one of their own, Father Ignatius Zvarevashe’s suggestion to localise the Catholic priests’ ordination ceremony and format.

The magazine immediately ran a disclaimer that views expressed by some contributors did not necessarily reflect the editorial position of the publication. I still do not understand why my small and humble contribution generated such discomfort. At least, they published it and I salute them for that.

But back to Munyaradzi, the attempt to deny him the right to think differently, which Chimakure’s paper is certainly not innocent of, is undemocratic. Is it not something that the paper wants everyone of us to believe it is fighting against?

Chimakure says we should develop a national ideology but his paper is reducing Munyaradzi’s story to a Zanu-PF affair. He is calling for something that he is not practising! We should all be celebrating Munyaradzi’s triumph, shouldn’t we? It surely must be one of the few achievements that unites us. That’s what I think.

This strange behaviour in some of us is comparable to Minister David Coltart’s recent statement invalidating the rating the United Nations gave our country’s literacy standing in Africa. According to the United Nations, we have overtaken Tunisia as the most literate country on the continent.

Minister Coltart claimed because the method used “was flawed”, it could not have produced a correct outcome. He went on to explain in a winding and confusing way what he meant but some of us were already too upset to continue following his logic.

As renowned novelist and colleague, Shimmer Chinodya would say: “What had gone into the minister’s head? How could he, our education minister, dispute an accolade bestowed upon our education system by the United Nations?’’

A colleague compared the minister’s utterances to a parent who accompanies his child to a prize-giving ceremony and then leaps up into the air to object publicly the merit of the prize that his child has won. It’s unfatherly, shameful and unheard of.

Even if he genuinely doubted the prize, he surely should have waited and told his wife in their bedroom in the middle of the night.

Several weeks ago, I challenged Minister Biti to tell us his party’s agenda. I challenged him to tell us if his party would have continued with the land reform programme if it had come to power.

I further challenged him if his party would have continued with the indigenisation and empowerment programme that Minister Kasukuwere is currently spearheading. Well, he hasn’t replied. He might still reply though since he is such a busy man. We should not forget besides being Minister of Finance he is also the Secretary-General of the MDC-T.

He is also the MP for Greendale and a partner in a law firm established a long time ago. We should not forget that he is a father and a family man. He must be a very busy man.

But it is the current constitution making programme that has completely exposed the dilemma of the MDC. They do not have a national agenda, only petty grievances: “Mugabe has stayed too long in power”; “Mugabe must have less powers than parliament”; “ambassadors must be appointed by parliament”; “it’s mismanagement that has brought the country to its present woes”; “there are no sanctions, only restrictive measures”.

No sanctions?

Minister Biti had hoped we would get over US$800 million from the donor community towards our US$2,5 million 2010 national budget because they had indicated they would provide it. Only a negligible amount eventually trickled in.

Then we resolved we would sweat it out and generate the money ourselves, especially through the sale of our precious minerals like diamonds. As I write this article, the world’s diamond producers and buyers are gathered in Israel where the West is trying for the umpteenth time to block us from selling our diamonds.

If they don’t want with their money, at least they should allow us to sell our diamonds and raise the money. How can our diamonds suddenly become “blood” when their own De Beers was mining and selling those very diamonds for 15 years without our knowledge and the West kept quiet about it and even deemed the diamonds clean?

That was day-light robbery. Honourable Prime Minister, where do you still get the courage to face the people and say there are only “targeted” sanctions? Are you not ashamed?

But it is the denial to celebrate our own African achievement by a section of our society that is intriguing. Chinua Achebe, the great Nigerian writer and novelist, describes this phenomenon in a chilling manner.

“Colonialism constructed elaborate ways to justify its actions. You do not walk in, seize the land, the people, the history of another and compose hymns of praise in his honour.

“To do that would amount to calling yourself a bandit. You would rather say the man you dispossessed is worthless and unfit to manage himself. If there are minerals you are carting away, you prove that he doesn’t own them, that they just happened to be lying around the same place.

“Therefore the agenda of the colonists did not, could not, make provision for the celebration of the world of the colonised.”

Is this not what we are still getting from our erstwhile colonial masters? It appears they are having a lot of difficulty in becoming Zimbabwean. At least, they should allow Munyaradzi to think differently. Is that not what they ‘taught’ us was the meaning of democracy?

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Sculpture saga sucks in Coltart

Newsday

2 November 2010

By Lesley Moyo

The saga of renowned artist Adam Madebe’s controversial statue of a nude man looking up into the sky which was pulled down from Bulawayo’s Tower Block gardens in the 1980s has sucked in Education, Sport and Culture minister Senator David Coltart.

Coltart has vowed to fight for its re-mounting.

He said he would ensure that the statue, Looking into the Future was brought back from the National Art Gallery in Bulawayo, to which it was banished.

The removal of the statue was spearheaded by the then Local Government, Rural and Urban Development minister, the late Enos Chikowore.

Speaking on the sidelines of the 23rd Annual Lions Club International Peace Poster Exhibition, where he was the guest of honour, the minister said the banning of the statue hindered artistic expression.

“It runs contrary to the free spirit of artistic expression in the country . . . As minister responsible for arts and culture I will advocate for it to come back,” said Coltart.

Coltart urged artists to continue using talent to promote cultural values and educate Zimbabweans about their past and promote a vision for a new and better Zimbabwe.

He expressed concern over the recent ban of the Owen Maseko Gukurahundi exhibition by the government and the artist’s subsequent arrest, when he delivered the 2010 Lozikeyi Lecture last Friday at the same venue.

“The statue is not promiscuous or suggestive in any way, it is simply an interpretation of the male human body,” he said.

“It is also of course a fine work of art and we can be justly proud that a Bulawayo citizen is responsible for it.”

He said art was a vehicle to bring about peace and reconciliation in a conflict riddled Zimbabwe.

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It was genocide — Coltart

Newsday

By Mernat Mafirakurewa

1 November 2010

Education, Arts, Sport and Culture minister David Coltart has equated the post-independence disturbances in Matabeleland that left an estimated 20 000 people dead, to genocide.

Coltart said it was a shame that the country had failed dismally to deal with past disturbances by setting up a truth, justice and reconciliation process as had happened elsewhere on the continent.

Speaking at the 13th annual Lozikeyi Lecture at the Bulawayo National Art Gallery on Friday, Coltart described Zimbabwe as a nation with a bloody history littered with years of serious human rights violations, violence, abuse of power, racial and ethnic discrimination.

Queen Lozikeyi was one of the senior wives of King Lobengula, the second and last monarch of the Ndebele people who ruled until 1894.

“The first 30 years post-independence have been marked by serious and consistent human rights abuses, including a politicide, if not genocide, which occurred in the mid-1980s in the south-west of the country,” said Coltart.

“In other words, Zimbabwe has had a lot of psychological and physical trauma to deal with as a nation and art has a critical role to play as we delve beyond subjective interpretations of history and begin to realise the truth of our past.”

He said 2010 had been a traumatic year for the National Art Gallery in Bulawayo because it has been the focus of a clash between certain arms of government and art.

The exhibition by Owen Maseko entitled Sibathontisele, focusing on the Gukurahundi mass killings era, was earlier this year banned and the artist still faces serious charges in court.

At the same time the sculpture Looking Into The Future, by Stanley Hadebe, of a nude man, was also banned.

“In short, that ‘vision of reality’, that ‘realisation of truth’ that both these works of art constitute is now being subjected to scrutiny and challenge by certain elements of government and in the process I fear that an attempt to grapple with our past in a palatable manner is being derailed, with potentially fearsome consequences,” said Coltart.

“In other words, because art is not actual reality it can usher reality in and help us deal with it in a moderated or graduated way – which in turn helps us individually and nationally to grapple with our past and current failings and successes in a palatable manner. “I personally feel that it is a shame that we have never been able to deal with the reality of what happened in our nation in the 1970s (during the liberation struggle) through a truth, justice and reconciliation process.”

Coltart said the main challenge for the country was that it had to deal with the past.

“Are we prepared to learn from it or are we determined to bury it and run the risk of repeating the shocking mistakes of the past? Whether we like it or not, the past did happen and we need gentle means to deal with it,” he said.

“The tragedy of simply banning politically controversial art is that we then never get the opportunity to debate it and learn from it.”

He described the banning of the pieces of arts as not only “ridiculous”, but also a violation of fundamental constitutional rights.

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Address 5 Brigade Genocides in Matabeleland – Coltart

Zimdiaspora.com

Sunday, 31 October 2010

BULAWAYO – A Zimbabwean Cabinet Minister  David Coltart says it was a shame that Zimbabwe was failing to address the Gukurahundi genocides which left 20 000 Ndebele speaking people dead inMatabeleland and Midlands provinces.

Coltart said it was a shame that the country had failed dismally to deal with past disturbances by setting up a truth, justice and reconciliation process as had happened elsewhere on the continent.

Speaking at the 13th annual Lozikeyi Lecture at the BulawayoNational Art Gallery on Friday, Coltart described Zimbabwe as a nation with a bloody history littered with years of serious human rights violations, violence, abuse of power, racial and ethnic discrimination.

Queen Lozikeyi was one of the senior wives of King Lobengula, the second and last monarch of the Ndebele people who ruled until 1894.

“The first 30 years post-independence have been marked by serious and consistent human rights abuses, including a politicide, if not genocide, which occurred in the mid-1980s in the south-west of the country,” said Coltart.

“In other words, Zimbabwe has had a lot of psychological and physical trauma to deal with as a nation and art has a critical role to play as we delve beyond subjective interpretations of history and begin to realise the truth of our past.”

He said 2010 had been a traumatic year for the National ArtGallery in Bulawayo because it has been the focus of a clash between certain arms of government and art.

The exhibition by Owen Maseko entitled Sibathontisele, focusing on the Gukurahundi mass killings era, was earlier this year banned and the artist still faces serious charges in court.

At the same time the sculpture Looking Into The Future, by Stanley Hadebe, of a nude man, was also banned.

“In short, that ‘vision of reality’, that ‘realisation of truth’ that both these works of art constitute is now being subjected to scrutiny and challenge by certain elements of government and in the process I fear that an attempt to grapple with our past in a palatable manner is being derailed, with potentially fearsome consequences,” said Coltart.

“In other words, because art is not actual reality it can usher reality in and help us deal with it in a moderated or graduated way – which in turn helps us individually and nationally to grapple with our past and current failings and successes in a palatable manner. “I personally feel that it is a shame that we have never been able to deal with the reality of what happened in our nation in the 1970s (during the liberation struggle) through a truth, justice and reconciliation process.”

Coltart said the main challenge for the country was that it had to deal with the past.

“Are we prepared to learn from it or are we determined to bury it and run the risk of repeating the shocking mistakes of the past? Whether we like it or not, the past did happen and we need gentle means to deal with it,” he said.

“The tragedy of simply banning politically controversial art is that we then never get the opportunity to debate it and learn from it.”

He described the banning of the pieces of arts as not only “ridiculous”, but also a violation of fundamental constitutional rights.

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