Interesting reason for PAC expansion in Zambia

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Kenneth King <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, 7 July, 2010 4:35:52
Subject: [GlobalAfricanPresence] History battle: Zambia's dubious role in 
Namibia's freedom fight

  
http://www.afrol.com/articles/36448

History battle: Zambia's dubious role in Namibia's freedom fight

afrol News, 6 July - The difficult past of Zambia's ambiguous role in Namibia's 
and Angola's freedom fight is haunting current President, thus Foreign 
Minister, 
Rupiah Banda. The 1970s anti-communist Zambian regime is said to have killed 
Namibian freedom fighters in agreement with apartheid South Africa and Sam 
Nujoma. Historians confirm the allegations. 


"There is no such a thing and the allegations are totally false," President 
Banda responded to the allegations from Namibia's National Society for Human 
Rights (NSHR), that he and former President Kenneth Kaunda had entered into a 
détente with South Africa and Henry Kissinger's USA, leading to the 
disappearance of Namibian fighters.

"And you know my conscience will not allow me to be a leader even here if I was 
involved in any disappearance of anybody anywhere in the world. I will not be 
President of this country and I will be prepared to resign even today. There 
was 
no such a thing," President Banda insisted.

What are the accusations that make a Zambian President offer his resignation if 
found true? They are explosive enough to cast a dark shadow over Zambia's and 
Namibia's history and their current leaderships. And historians speaking to 
afrol News confirm there is much truth to the allegations.

NSHR Director Phil ya Nangoloh started the debate in anticipation of President 
Banda's official visit to Namibia, demanding an explanation for what happened 
to 
dozens of SWAPO freedom fighters that disappeared in Zambia during a 1976 purge 
against the left wing of the freedom movement, which is now Namibia's ruling 
party.

Himself a SWAPO fighter in those days, the outspoken human rights activist 
outlines how SWAPO leader Sam Nujoma - Namibia's first President - and Zambian 
President Kaunda together with his FM Banda plotted to disarm SWAPO fighters 
then based in Zambia who were in opposition to Mr Nujoma's anti-communist 
stance.

According to Mr Nangoloh, an anti-communist détente between the US, apartheid 
South Africa and Zambia was in the making in 1974. The alliance was to stop the 
advance of Marxist movements in the region; in particular Angola's MPLA and 
partly Mozambique's Frelimo, but also Zimbabwe's ZANU led by Robert Mugabe and 
Zambia-based factions of SWAPO, both seen as radical and pro-communist.

As part of this détente, "SWAPO's armed wing, the People's Liberation Army of 
Namibia (PLAN) - like Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) forces in Rhodesia 
- had to be disarmed and be barred from using Zambia as a springboard to attack 
South African forces in Namibia's Caprivi Strip," Mr Nangoloh says. 


During September 1975, Zambia formally ordered PLAN fighters to cease all 
military activities on Zambian soil. In April 1976, Namibia's PLAN fighters in 
south-western Zambia were "violently disarmed by Zambian troops," he adds.

Mr Nangoloh claims PLAN fighters in Zambia were thereafter taken to "the 
notorious Mboroma concentration camp near Kabwe" in Zambia, where several were 
killed. At a later location, the Nyango camp, between 40 and 60 "radical" or 
"rebel" PLAN commanders "started disappearing without a trace individually and 
or in small groups," he further claims.

The majority of PLAN fighters however were later sent for "rehabilitation" to 
Mr 
Nujoma's new main basis in Angola. Also here, many "disappeared" or were killed 
at Mr Nujoma's orders.

Mr Nangoloh's allegations have spurred strong reactions in Zambia, not only 
from 
President Banda. According to official history writing in Zambia, the front 
line 
nation plaid an important role in the independence struggle of Southern Africa. 
Zambia hosted a large number of freedom movements, was a safe haven for 
oppressed neighbours and showed great hospitality at a great political and 
economic price.

This "official history" of Zambia undoubtedly is true, and Zambians can for the 
most take pride in their nation's important part in Southern Africa's 
liberation 
history. 


But also Mr Nangoloh's accounts are mostly to be believed, historians hold. 
They 
are parallel truths driven by a very difficult situation for Zambia in the 
1970s, which however has been poorly documented and described so far.

Indications of President Kaunda's double play can be found in standard history 
textbooks, such as Oliver and Atmore's trendsetting "Africa since 1800". Here, 
both Zambia's key role as a front line state hosting foreign freedom movements 
and President Kaunda's "bizarre meeting" with South African Prime Minister John 
Vorster in a train coach straddling the Zambian-Rhodesian border in August 1975 
are described.

Also, President Kaunda's tense relations with Mr Mugabe's ZANU and Angola's 
MPLA 
are well documented and referred to in common textbooks. ZANU fighters were 
arrested in Zambia, having to evacuate to Mozambique and Tanzania. Mr Mugabe in 
a 1976 interview even called the Zambian government "an enemy of our 
revolution." President Kaunda only had a relaxed relation to the South African 
communists (SACP), who formed the core of the ANC's armed wing Umkhonto we 
Sizwe. 


But the depth of President Kaunda's involvement in fighting freedom movements 
he 
deemed Marxist or pro-communist have only been poorly studied. This also 
includes Zambia's role in the Namibian freedom struggle and SWAPO leader 
Nujoma's role in the regional play.

As Cape Town history professor emeritus Christopher Saunders writes in a 2007 
essay, there are "worrying trends" in current Namibian history writing 
concerning "patriotic history" as supported by the ruling SWAPO. 


The rather well documented executions of dissident SWAPO members at Mr Nujoma's 
orders lately have only been brought up by Mr Nangoloh and his NSHR in Namibia. 
Books on the issue by Mr and Ms Beukes (1986) and Ben Motinga (1989) were 
published in Namibia shortly before independence in 1990, but not after.

All other accounts have come from exiled Namibians or foreign historians. 
Siegfried Groth, a German pastor who had worked closely with SWAPO, in 1995 
published his critical book "Namibia: The wall of silence". "When Groth's book 
appeared, the Namibian President, Sam Nujoma, appeared on state television to 
warn the nation against Groth's 'false history'," professor Saunders notes.

Paul Trewhela, a former South African political prisoner and exile, is among 
those having dug most deeply into these aspects of the Southern African 
liberation struggle. Mr Trewhela in a longer interview told afrol News that Mr 
Nangoloh's accounts are "at least generally correct." President Banda was 
"wilfully and knowingly not telling the truth. This has been the case with the 
SWAPO government throughout too," he added.

"In the decades following independence, Zambia was in a very difficult 
situation," Mr Trewhela however defends the Kaunda government. Zambia, as a 
landlocked country at the time had hostile white minority governments to its 
west, south and east, including Portuguese-ruled Angola and Mozambique, 
apartheid states South Africa and Rhodesia and South African-occupied South 
West 
Africa (Namibia).

Zambia's economic routes to the coast were very vulnerable. "In the mid-1970s, 
President Kaunda was also very suspicious of Soviet interests in Africa," Mr 
Trewhela confirms. There was an enormous pressure placed on Zambia by Western 
and South African interests to resist Soviet penetration, in Angola in 
particular, once the Portuguese colonial empire collapsed in 1974.

"This took the form of requiring, and securing, Zambian state participation in 
measures to prevent the Marxist MPLA from gaining control of Angola following 
the departure of the Portuguese forces. The Zambian state in turn required, and 
secured, collaboration in this from the SWAPO leadership, then based in 
Zambia," 
Mr Trewhela explains.

Several international, non-Namibian historians confirm this. The Canadian 
historian Lauren Dobell writes in a 1995 book that "SWAPO had been a minor but 
captive player" in the Kissinger detente strategy of the mid-1970s. Also 
heavyweight historians Stephen Ellis and Tsepo Sechaba in a 1992 book say SWAPO 
had "compromised dangerously with the Vorster-Kaunda-Kissinger plan to invade 
Angola" in order to get President Kaunda's support to move headquarters from 
Tanzania to Zambia.

Zambia and SWAPO thus initially sided with pro-Western UNITA in the Angolan 
civil war. At one moment, "units of the SWAPO military were ordered into battle 
in Angola on the same side as UNITA and the South African army, against the 
MPLA 
and its Cuban allies," Mr Trewhela says, around the same time as SWAPO was 
fighting the South African army in Namibia.

Mr Nujoma's anti-communism move "in turn provoked rebellion from SWAPO troops 
and the SWAPO Youth League, which was suppressed by force by the Zambian state 
and by SWAPO leaders," Mr Trewhela adds. But, all of this was "subsequently 
denied when both the Zambian state and the SWAPO leaders adapted to the victory 
of the MPLA in Angola, brought about by the defeat of the South African Defence 
Force by Cuban troops and weapons." 


Only after this victory did SWAPO move to Angola, after the ANC's Oliver Tambo 
had managed to persuade the MPLA to forgive Mr Nujoma. At first, "the Angolans 
were angry over SWAPO's manoeuvres against the MPLA, and were unwilling to 
grant 
the organisation bases in Angola," historians Ellis and Sechaba write. After 
ANC 
persuasion, "SWAPO was duly granted bases in Angola, and in course of time it 
adopted Marxist rhetoric in line with that of its hosts."

But meanwhile, Mr Nujoma and President Kaunda still were facing rebellious 
fighters and critical SWAPO cadres in Zambia. Historian Susan Brown writes 
that, 
in September 1975, "the Zambian government ordered SWAPO to cease all military 
activities from Zambian soil. SWAPO was also ordered to vacate its farm outside 
Lusaka, where about 500 people were based, by the end of September. SWAPO 
sources were reported as claiming that Zambia had, in addition, intercepted all 
arms supplies to SWAPO."

In 1975, the purges started. Historian Lauren Dobell writes: "In the early 
hours 
of 21 April 1976, the Zambian army and police arrested 27 SWAPO members in 
Lusaka, of whom eleven ... considered to be leading the rebellion, were singled 
out and taken to Nampundwe Camp, where they were detained for two months before 
being transferred to prisons in Tanzania. Between 1,600 and 2,000 dissident 
fighters were also rounded up in the Western Province and taken to Mboroma 
Camp, 
near Kabwe."

Pastor Groth, who spoke to many of those detained in Mboroma, says most 
fighters 
were given an option to rejoin SWAPO, now based in Angola: "The majority of 
these prisoners came to the tough decision to return to SWAPO. Some 600 out of 
this group were taken from Mboroma to a re-education process at the SWAPO farm 
in Nyango; others to Angola. Little is known about the destiny of the 
returnees."

Mr Trewhela holds that "the disarming of PLAN fighters by the Zambian army in 
1976 has been abundantly confirmed. The lack of adequate accounting for missing 
former PLAN fighters arrested in Zambia at this time is also confirmed."

He adds that the SWAPO purges of the 1970s were mainly in Zambia. "Its purges 
of 
the 1980s then took place at its subsequent bases in southern Angola, where a 
Marxist one-party state assured much greater scope than in Zambia for the 
Nujoma 
leadership to murder and imprison SWAPO members at will."

While the disappearance of SWAPO fighters in Zambian and Angolan exile is 
little 
discussed in Namibia, non-SWAPO historians mostly agree that many Namibians - 
probably hundreds - died at the hands of their own leadership during the 
freedom 
struggle. There also seems to be agreement that several SWAPO - but also ZANU 
and MPLA - fighters were killed by Zambian authorities or troops.

Mr Trewhela told afrol News he basically agrees with the accounts of Mr 
Nangoloh, only disagreeing with some details. "Probably nobody has been more 
dogged and courageous in pursuit of the truth in the region than Phil ya 
Nangoloh, who has been threatened on many occasions," says the South African 
specialist writer.

"In general, though, my belief is that Zambia does have a case to answer 
concerning the welfare and lives of Namibian nationals held as prisoners under 
its own state authority in the mid-1970s, and that the full history of the 
Detente scenario in Southern Africa should be brought to light," Mr Trewhela 
concludes.

"Clarification of the reality of this period in the history of Southern Africa 
from 35 years ago is an urgent necessity for the region as a whole, above all 
for Namibia, where there has been no Truth and Reconciliation Commission. It 
would be a huge step if the truth about as many instances as possible could be 
quietly and comprehensively established, without fear or favour," he adds.

By Rainer Chr. Hennig

© afrol News


__._,_.___
Reply to sender | Reply to group | Reply via web post | Start a New Topic 
Messages in this topic (1) 

Recent Activity:  
Visit Your Group 
MARKETPLACE
Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the 
Yahoo! Toolbar now. 


________________________________
 
Get great advice about dogs and cats.  Visit the Dog & Cat Answers Center. 

________________________________
 
Hobbies & Activities Zone: Find others who share your passions! Explore new 
interests. 

 
Switch to: Text-Only, Daily Digest • Unsubscribe • Terms of Use
. 

__,_._,___ 


      

-- 
Sending your posting to [email protected]

Unsubscribe by sending an email to [email protected]

You can also visit http://groups.google.com/group/payco

Visit our website at www.mayihlome.wordpress.com

Reply via email to