Journalist
who first exposed Matabeleland atrocities
By
Donald Trelford
Posted to the web: 12/03/2000 15:17:11
Donald
Trelford was on the brink of being sacked as Observer
editor by tycoon Tiny Rowland after he exposed atrocities in Matabeleland.
Now, close to two decades later, he reveals the full story of the scandal
that may yet end Robert Mugabe's presidency
It began
in the parched earth of Matabeleland, among the cactus and the baobab
trees, and ended over lunch in a Park Lane casino, served by long-legged
girls in fishnet tights.
For two
hectic weeks the battle was monitored in every news bulletin, causing
anguished debates about press freedom in Parliament and the media -
and almost led to the The Observer being sold to Robert Maxwell.
The public row between me, as editor of The Observer, and Tiny Rowland,
then chief executive of Lonrho, the international conglomerate which
had bought the newspaper three years before, grew into a Fleet Street
soap opera that overshadowed the tragic human story that provoked it
- the suffering of the minority Ndebele people at the hands of the North
Korean-trained Fifth Brigade of the Zimbabwe Army.
This story may now finally emerge, for the Supreme Court has ordered
President Mugabe to publish an official report into the atrocities which
he has suppressed for 19 years. These revelations could even hasten
his overthrow.
After two decades, during which the economy has been ruined and corruption
rife, Mugabe is looking vulnerable. He lost a referendum designed to
entrench his constitutional position. In crude moves to boost his popularity,
he has been encouraging Africans to take over white farms and has stoked
up an international incident with Britain by opening our diplomatic
bags in breach of the Vienna Convention.
For the first time since independence, however, the opposition has teeth
and observers believe he can survive only by moving the electoral goalposts.
Mugabe ruled supreme when I met him in April 1984. I went to interview
him for the country's fourth anniversary of independence for a current
affairs series on Channel 4. I also planned to write a piece for The
Observer. I told Rowland about the visit as a courtesy, since his company
had started in the former Rhodesia (hence 'Lonrho') and had major business
interests there.
That was a mistake, since it gave Rowland an opportunity to ingratiate
himself with Mugabe ('I have arranged for my editor to publish an interview
in The Observer ') and repair relations that had been damaged by Lonrho's
long support for the opposition leader, Joshua Nkomo. (I heard later
that Lonrho had also supported Mugabe's Zanu party, but Mugabe never
heard about this, because the cash had stuck to the fingers of an emissary
who had used it to buy himself a house in Hampstead.)
When I arrived in Harare, I was met by Rowland's Zimbabwe 'fixer', Godwin
Matatu, who whisked me off for lunch with Lonrho's local board. The
interview was clearly to be a Lonrho production and Matatu, a gregarious,
alcoholic journalist who died in 1989, was to be my minder.
The Mugabe interview was disastrously dull, unusable for television,
of interest only to a specialist African magazine (where, in fact, it
subsequently appeared). When I asked him if he would consider a political
rather than a military solution in Matabeleland, where a curfew had
been in force since February, he replied bluntly: 'The solution is a
military one. Their grievances are unfounded. The verdict of the voters
was cast in 1980. They should have accepted defeat then.' Then he added
chillingly: 'The situation in Matabeleland is one that requires a change.
The people must be reoriented.'
| “The
situation in Matabeleland is one that requires a change. The people
must be reoriented” - Mugabe |
After
I had appeared as guest of the week on ZBC, I was recognised by a group
of Africans in the lobby of Meikles Hotel. One took me aside conspiratorially:
'You should go to Matabeleland to see what is happening to our people
there. There are terrible things.' He hurried away, as if afraid to
be overheard.
No media had been allowed inside the curfew area for 10 weeks, but there
were rumours about brutal treatment of the population by Mugabe's soldiers,
ostensibly searching for 'dissidents' from across the Botswana border.
I said to Matatu: 'Let's go to Bulawayo in the morning.'
We found little sign there of military activity, just the odd 'hippo'
armoured personnel carrier trundling along a dirt road with mounted
guns, or a truck-load of troops with rocket-propelled grenades on their
AK-47 rifles. Rain had made the Lowveld roads almost unpassable.
Schoolgirls were marching quietly in green check dresses or lying in
the shade; old men scratching with hoes; cattle standing in the dry
river beds; goats, donkeys, marmosets, even a kudu bull, dashing across
the road.
We knew we weren't allowed officially into the curfew area, but asked
our driver to brave the roadblocks anyway. We passed three without bother,
all manned cheerily by policemen in brown boots, then Matatu did some
name-dropping to persuade a tough-looking soldier to let us through.
We were able to drive through the no-go areas, past Kezi, Antelope Mine,
Bhalagwe Camp - all names, I learned later, that filled the Ndebele
with dread. We saw nothing unusual.
Around 10pm, there was a call from the hotel reception to say that a
man wanted to deliver a letter. An African tapped on the door and handed
it over. It read simply: 'Please accompany this friend.' Moving quietly
to avoid disturbing Matatu next door, I followed the man to the car
park, where a headlight beamed in recognition.
I had no idea where I was going, or who with; and nobody knew where
I'd gone. I knew instinctively that I couldn't take Matatu with me.
Apart from the Lonrho connection, he was a Shona and close to the government
and his presence would have deterred people from speaking honestly.
I climbed nervously into the car and was taken in silence for several
miles out of town into the curfew area. There - after a semi-comic interlude
in which we gave a lift to a policeman - we stopped at a remote house,
pipped horns for ages, and finally changed cars with another man.
He took us for another long ride to a religious mission where, for much
of the night, I was given a series of eyewitness accounts, sworn affidavits
and signed statements from victims of the Matabeleland atrocities. These
were graphic, horrific and profoundly moving.
One name kept recurring, as in a nightmare. Brigadier Shiri, known as
Black Jesus, was head of the Fifth Brigade. And there was one recurring
story, about a major who held up a dead baby and told villagers: 'This
is what will happen to your babies if you help dissidents.' He then
dropped the tiny corpse in the dust.
Back in the car again, I met a man from Esigodoni village who had been
beaten close to death by agents of the Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) in front of his family. They were warned they would be shot if
they uttered a sound. 'They began beating us with sticks and guns, bayoneting
us, burning plastic against our skin while our hands and mouths were
secured. They tore curtains, put cushions into our mouths. We were tortured
for about four hours.'
A man called Jason was brought to the house. He had been chopping trees
at Welonke when two soldiers turned up with fixed bayonets and whips
on their belts. They asked if he and his wife had seen any dissidents
and grew increasingly angry when they said they hadn't. They beat his
wife and grandmother and took him away.
Neighbours were collected and they all marched on, their progress broken
by periodic beatings and a fight they were forced to stage for the soldiers'
entertainment. At the village school they shot two children who had
tried to run away. Eventually nine of them were forced to dig a hole
to a depth of two or three feet and ordered to jump into it.
Jason told me: 'The commander leaned against a tree, opened his radio
cassette and shot five men. On the grave we put branches. I also saw
a big grave which had stones in it. There are 16 buried in this grave.'
Earlier I had come across Peter Godwin, of the Sunday Times, who said
bodies had been thrown down a nearby mineshaft owned by Lonrho. (Later,
Roy Hattersley was sued by Rowland for making this claim in a speech
- what Rowland never knew was that I had helped draft Hattersley's speech.)
Godwin had already got some atrocity stories into print, but he was
inhibited by the fact that he couldn't betray his presence in the curfew
area for fear of being expelled or, as a Zimbabwean himself, suffering
even worse retribution. Once he understood that I hadn't been sent by
Rowland to put a Mugabe spin on the situation, we exchanged useful information.
I returned to the hotel at dawn, checked out without waking Matatu,
then flew to London via Harare, arriving on Saturday morning with my
story written. While in Harare I had two conversations. One was with
a military attaché at the British High Commission, who wasn't
at all surprised by the news from Matabeleland.
The other was with a South African director of Lonrho, Nick Kruger,
who wasn't surprised either. 'What you have discovered, Donald,' he
said, 'is the eternal truth of Africa. Stuff them, then they stuff you.
For centuries we stuffed the blacks; now it's their turn to stuff us.
The Ndebele stuffed the Shona; now it's the Shonas' turn. '
My dilemma on returning - should I publish an anodyne interview with
Mugabe or tell the truth about Matabeleland, thereby damaging the interests
of my proprietor? - has since been written up as a classic case by the
Institute of Global Ethics. For me, there was no choice.
I decided to ring Tiny around 5pm on Saturday, too late for him to do
anything to stop publication, but before he could hear the news from
anyone else. He slammed the telephone down after threatening the direst
revenge.
| “And
there was one recurring story, about a major who held up a dead
baby and told villagers: 'This is what will happen to your babies
if you help dissidents.' He then dropped the tiny corpse in the
dust” |
Next morning
I turned on the BBC eight o'clock news to hear my story condemned as
lies in an official statement by Mugabe, supported by a letter of apology
from Rowland: 'I take full responsibility for what in my view was discourteous,
disingenuous and wrong in the editor of a serious newspaper widely read
in Africa'. He described me as 'an incompetent reporter' and announced
that I would be dismissed.
I went ahead with a planned holiday to Guernsey, but quickly returned
on the advice of Lord Goodman, the former Observer chairman, who said
I must be seen on the bridge of my ship. The story was front-page news
for a fortnight, 'the most entertaining hullabaloo', as one writer put
it, 'since Harry Evans fell out with Rupert Murdoch'.
Rowland wrote me an open letter, which he distributed to all papers
before I could see it, saying Lonrho would not go on supporting a failing
editor who showed no concern for their commercial interests. I replied
in kind, pointing out that the circulation had actually gone up by 22
per cent in the eight years I had been editor. The Daily Mail published
both letters in full under the headlines 'Dear Donald' and 'Dear Tiny'.
Rowland insisted that I should go back to Zimbabwe for a longer investigation.
I refused, on the grounds that I had already established the truth of
my story and that to do so would endanger the lives of my sources.
The Foreign Office, more concerned about relations with Mugabe than
with human rights and doubtless sensitive that Britain had provided
some training for the Fifth Brigade, was briefing against me. I learnt
this from Prince Charles, with whom I happened to have lunch at that
time. 'The Foreign Office tell me you were wrong about Matabeleland,'
he said airily. I ate my soup in silence.
Not all the papers were on my side. Paul Johnson said editors had no
business trying to be reporters. John Junor wrote: 'If Mr Trelford truly
feels that way about Mr Rowland, wouldn't it be more honourable for
him to stop accepting Mr Rowland's money?' The Times suggested I had
forced a showdown deliberately. The Daily Telegraph said: 'Those who
pay the piper must be expected to demand some influence over the choice
of tunes he plays.'
The Guardian said the paper should 'find its salvation where the people
who write the cheques and the people who write the words can work together'.
This proved difficult at The Observer when Lonrho announced it was withdrawing
financial support. Provoked by a ruling from The Observer 's independent
directors that Rowland had interfered improperly, it put a hard-faced
accountant in the office to stop me spending money.
This brought questions in Parliament. When Peter Shore for Labour asked
Norman Tebbit what he planned to do to protect the editorial independence
of the editor of The Observer, the Secretary for Trade and Industry
clearly enjoyed saying 'Nothing'. This was soon after the paper's revelations
about Mark Thatcher's business connections with Oman.
The Observer 's journalists were highly supportive of their editor -
until Rowland let it be known he was planning to sell the paper to Maxwell.
A meeting at Claridges was announced for the next day. I knew Rowland
would never sell to Maxwell and this was just a bluff to frighten the
journalists. If so, it certainly worked.
I was interested to hear an interview with Maxwell about The Observer
on my car radio. He 'greatly admired' me, he said, and would retain
me as editor. Then, asked what he would have done about the Mark Thatcher
stories, he paused and replied in his deepest tones: 'I'd have stamped
on him.'
By now I felt the paper was being damaged and something had to be done
to break the deadlock. So I wrote to Rowland offering my resignation
- 'I could not allow the paper's future and the prospects of its staff
to be jeopardised by my personal position, which sadly seems to be all
that stands in the way of the paper's development.'
Rowland seized the olive branch and we made up over an edgy lunch in
the incongruous ambience of one of Lonrho's London casinos. Undeterred
by the pop music and scantily dressed females, we concocted a priceless
statement that we shared an affection for three things - Africa, The
Observer and each other.
For us and for the paper, that was the end of a remarkable and in some
ways entertaining episode. For the people of Matabeleland, however,
it provided only brief illumination before the darkness came again -
Guardian
Donald
Trelford was editor of The Observer from 1975 to 1993 and is now Professor
of Journalism Studies at Sheffield University
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