News / National
Mwashita, Victoria Chitepo to be buried on the same day at the same place
12 Apr 2016 at 06:15hrs | Views
HISTORY will be made tomorrow when two heroines, who both died last Friday, will be laid to rest among men and women of their ilk at the National Heroes Acre, the first such joint burial in the history of the hallowed grounds.
This comes in the wake of the conferment of national heroine status on Vivian Mwashita, a venerated war veteran and former Zanu-PF House of Assembly member for Sunningdale who succumbed to diabetes last Friday, the same day another national heroine Victoria Chitepo was found dead in the bathroom of her Mt Pleasant house.
Zanu-PF secretary for Administration and Home Affairs Minister, Ignatius Chombo, announced Mwashita's national heroine status at her funeral wake in New Cranborne, Harare, last night.
He was accompanied by service chiefs, among them Zimbabwe Defence Forces Commander General Constantine Chiwenga, Zimbabwe National Army Commander Lieutenant-General Philip Valerio Sibanda, Air Force of Zimbabwe Commander Air Marshal Perrance Shiri and Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Services Commissioner-General Paradzai Zimondi.
Also present were Zimbabwe Republic Police Deputy Commissioner-General Innocent Matibiri and Welfare Services for War Veterans, War Collaborators, Ex-Political Detainees and Restrictees permanent secretary Brigadier-General (Retired) Asher Walter Tapfumaneyi.
Chombo said the past week had been difficult for Zanu-PF following the demise of Cdes Mwashita, Chitepo and Chinyani Chinamano, the son of national liberation heroes, Cdes Josiah and Ruth Chinamano.
"On Friday, after receiving news of the death of Chitepo, we then received a letter from Charles Tawenga advising us of the death of Mwashita. "Then on Saturday, we also received news that the last son of Cdes Josiah and Ruth Chinamano had been found dead in Highfield.
"We then asked war veterans who worked with Mwashita during the liberation struggle, the likes of Chiwenga, Shiri, Tapfumaneyi and Minister of Water, Mai Kashiri (Oppah Muchinguri) for a detailed history of her contribution.
"They put everything together, starting from Rusape where she was born, then when she came here (to Harare) where she did her primary school, before going to St Peter's Kubatana in Highfield where she did her secondary education.
"They also wrote about how she went to the liberation struggle in 1975 where she was trained by such comrades as Augustine Chihuri before she also became a trainer during the bombing of Nyadzonia." Chombo said the Politburo was convinced that Mwashita deserved to be interred at the national shrine.
"As the Politburo, we completed the consultations this afternoon as instructed by President Mugabe that we should consult all the members to ensure there was consensus.
"Politburo members concurred that she was a consistent cadre who was committed to the liberation of the country. She is someone who was consistent during the liberation struggle and remained so even after Independence. Others were expelled while some were suspended from the party because they sold out, but she remained consistent.
"We even checked her history during her tenure in the Central Intelligence Organisation for more than 10 years and when she became an MP. We found out that her history was that of a consistent cadre. So, President Mugabe said she should be declared a national heroine," said Chombo drawing ululation from mourners who broke into song and dance.
He said the family had also agreed to have Mwashita buried at the national shrine alongside Chitepo tomorrow. "It is the first time that it is happening that we have national heroines being interred at the national shrine at the same time," said Chombo.
Mwashita, who was 58, joined the liberation struggle in 1975 and after training she was deployed in Rushinga where she operated until the end of the war. At Independence, Mwashita joined the Office of the President and later mainstream politics and became the Member of Parliament for Sunningdale and later Senator.
She leaves behind, her husband, Mr Peter Muchicho, three children and six grandchildren. Mwashita was born at Rusape Hospital on September 26, 1958.
She attended primary school at Rukudzo Primary School in Kambuzuma in Harare before enrolling at St Peter's Kubatana High School, in Highfield for form one to four.
The national heroine then crossed into Mozambique in April 1975. At Independence in 1980, Mwashita first worked at the Zanu Headquarters at No. 88 Manica Road (now Robert Mugabe Street), in Harare.
She was later attested into the Central Intelligence Organisation, where she served until 1992, before she retired to join politics. In 1995, Mwashita won the Harare South Constituency on a Zanu-PF ticket before becoming the Zanu-PF Senator for Mvurachena Constituency in Harare.
This comes in the wake of the conferment of national heroine status on Vivian Mwashita, a venerated war veteran and former Zanu-PF House of Assembly member for Sunningdale who succumbed to diabetes last Friday, the same day another national heroine Victoria Chitepo was found dead in the bathroom of her Mt Pleasant house.
Zanu-PF secretary for Administration and Home Affairs Minister, Ignatius Chombo, announced Mwashita's national heroine status at her funeral wake in New Cranborne, Harare, last night.
He was accompanied by service chiefs, among them Zimbabwe Defence Forces Commander General Constantine Chiwenga, Zimbabwe National Army Commander Lieutenant-General Philip Valerio Sibanda, Air Force of Zimbabwe Commander Air Marshal Perrance Shiri and Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Services Commissioner-General Paradzai Zimondi.
Also present were Zimbabwe Republic Police Deputy Commissioner-General Innocent Matibiri and Welfare Services for War Veterans, War Collaborators, Ex-Political Detainees and Restrictees permanent secretary Brigadier-General (Retired) Asher Walter Tapfumaneyi.
Chombo said the past week had been difficult for Zanu-PF following the demise of Cdes Mwashita, Chitepo and Chinyani Chinamano, the son of national liberation heroes, Cdes Josiah and Ruth Chinamano.
"On Friday, after receiving news of the death of Chitepo, we then received a letter from Charles Tawenga advising us of the death of Mwashita. "Then on Saturday, we also received news that the last son of Cdes Josiah and Ruth Chinamano had been found dead in Highfield.
"We then asked war veterans who worked with Mwashita during the liberation struggle, the likes of Chiwenga, Shiri, Tapfumaneyi and Minister of Water, Mai Kashiri (Oppah Muchinguri) for a detailed history of her contribution.
"They put everything together, starting from Rusape where she was born, then when she came here (to Harare) where she did her primary school, before going to St Peter's Kubatana in Highfield where she did her secondary education.
"They also wrote about how she went to the liberation struggle in 1975 where she was trained by such comrades as Augustine Chihuri before she also became a trainer during the bombing of Nyadzonia." Chombo said the Politburo was convinced that Mwashita deserved to be interred at the national shrine.
"As the Politburo, we completed the consultations this afternoon as instructed by President Mugabe that we should consult all the members to ensure there was consensus.
"Politburo members concurred that she was a consistent cadre who was committed to the liberation of the country. She is someone who was consistent during the liberation struggle and remained so even after Independence. Others were expelled while some were suspended from the party because they sold out, but she remained consistent.
"We even checked her history during her tenure in the Central Intelligence Organisation for more than 10 years and when she became an MP. We found out that her history was that of a consistent cadre. So, President Mugabe said she should be declared a national heroine," said Chombo drawing ululation from mourners who broke into song and dance.
He said the family had also agreed to have Mwashita buried at the national shrine alongside Chitepo tomorrow. "It is the first time that it is happening that we have national heroines being interred at the national shrine at the same time," said Chombo.
Mwashita, who was 58, joined the liberation struggle in 1975 and after training she was deployed in Rushinga where she operated until the end of the war. At Independence, Mwashita joined the Office of the President and later mainstream politics and became the Member of Parliament for Sunningdale and later Senator.
She leaves behind, her husband, Mr Peter Muchicho, three children and six grandchildren. Mwashita was born at Rusape Hospital on September 26, 1958.
She attended primary school at Rukudzo Primary School in Kambuzuma in Harare before enrolling at St Peter's Kubatana High School, in Highfield for form one to four.
The national heroine then crossed into Mozambique in April 1975. At Independence in 1980, Mwashita first worked at the Zanu Headquarters at No. 88 Manica Road (now Robert Mugabe Street), in Harare.
She was later attested into the Central Intelligence Organisation, where she served until 1992, before she retired to join politics. In 1995, Mwashita won the Harare South Constituency on a Zanu-PF ticket before becoming the Zanu-PF Senator for Mvurachena Constituency in Harare.
Source - the herald