Abel Muzorewa
Abel Tendekayi Muzorewa (born 1925),
Methodist bishop and nationalist leader, was prime minister of the short-lived coalition government in what was called
Zimbabwe Rhodesia. He held office for only a few months in
1979.
In
1971 the British struck a deal with
Ian Smith that provided for a transition to majority rule in exchange for an end to sanctions against the government. Muzorewa joined with an inexperienced cleric, Reverend
Canaan Banana, to form the United African National Council (UANC) to oppose the settlement.
The proposed referendum was withdrawn; Muzorewa found himself a national leader and an international personality. The liberation movements - the
Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) of Reverend
Ndabaningi Sithole and the
Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (ZAPU) of
Joshua Nkomo--both placed themselves under the ANC umbrella even though they had some doubts when Muzorewa founded a national party.
After ZANU, taken over by
Robert Mugabe after disagreements with Sitole, and ZAPU undertook guerrilla warfare, the UANC was the only legal black party since it rejected violence.
On the
3rd March 1978, Abel Muzorewa, Ndabaningi Sitole and other moderate leaders signed an agreement at Governors Lodge, Salisbury, which paved the way for the interim government, the leadership of which was an Executive Council made up of Muzorewa, Sithole and Chief Jeremiah Chirau, along with
Ian Smith. This Executive Council would run the affairs of state prior to elections taking place. A new constitution was drafted and in a Whites-only referendum which took place in
January 1979. There were seats reserved for the White minority, as were a quarter of the Cabinet positions. An overwhelming majority of 85% voted Yes.
Elections were held, and the UANC won. Josiah Zion Gumede was the first President, Muzorewa became prime minister and the country's name was changed to
Zimbabwe Rhodesia. But both Mugabe and Nkomo denounced the arrangement, the war continued, and no international recognition was forthcoming from the USA and Britain because the external Marxist leaders had not been included in the elections. The civil war that Ian Smith hoped to stem when he worked out the 'internal settlement' continued unabated.
The British government then asked all parties come to London for face to face meetings, including Nkomo and Mugabe, and thrash out a final settlement to the Rhodesian question at the
Lancaster House Agreement. For the conference, Nkomo joined with Mugabe as the Patriotic Front (PF). The conference was held from
10th September 1979 until
15th December 1979 under the chairmanship of
Lord Carrington, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs. Muzorewa was persuaded to accept fresh elections, to be held in early
1980. The new elections took place at the end of
February 1980, after a campaign filled with much intimidation, mostly on the part of the Rhodesian security forces and the UANC.
These new elections were won with a resounding majority by
Robert Mugabe and
ZANU, with the UANC only having 3 out of 80 seats reserved for blacks in the
House of Assembly. Muzorewa stood against Mugabe in the presidential election of
1995, but was resoundingly defeated.
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\nExternal links
\n* http://www.gospelcom.net/dacb/stories/zimbabwe/muzorewa_abel.html\n* http://richardknight.homestead.com/files/zimletmarch80.htm American report on the election
Muzorewa, Abel