(HERALD ZW) Unknown sect tried to visit Njelele: War vets
Unknown sect tried to visit Njelele: War vetsFriday, 17 August 2012 00:57
Bulawayo Bureau
War veterans chairman Cde Jabulani Sibanda has said the 568 people who last week attempted to visit the Njelele shrine in Matopos National Park, Matabeleland South province, are not former freedom fighters but just a religious sect. The war veterans leadership two months ago also disowned the group after it caused a stir because of its series of unsanctioned visits to the shrine, situated in Matobo District.
In an interview on the sidelines of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces Day celebrations at White City Stadium on Tuesday, Cde Sibanda said the group was not made up of war veterans, but were members of an unknown religious sect.
“I cannot continue commenting on those people because the whole thing is nonsense. We have always talked about their conduct that they are not war veterans. The truth is that this thing hurts me so much and I do not want to talk about it,” said Cde Sibanda.
“These people are a religious sect and we cannot comment on their issue because we are war veterans and not leaders of a religious sect.”
Asked what measures his organisation would take against the group that has defied warnings by chiefs and politicians, Cde Sibanda said, “Authorities should act as they are the ones who should do something about it.”
Cde Sibanda recently said the group was made up of renegades after it called for his sacking.
The 568 caused a stir on Thursday last week when they descended on Matopos National Park and conducted rituals without the knowledge and approval of the traditional leadership from Matabeleland South province.
Meanwhile, political leaders in Matabeleland South this week condemned the group saying its visits were disrespectful.
Governor Angeline Masuku said the Njelele shrine was not a cemetery where bones of dead people are dumped, as doing so was tantamount to polluting an important place used by traditional leaders to ask for rain.
She castigated the chiefs that were involved in the visits, saying they had angered the region and showed no respect for the chiefs in the province.
Zanu-PF provincial chairman Cde Andrew Langa said the province was not happy with the group’s behaviour.
“While Njelele is a national shrine, it would be nice that those who want to go there should first consult the leadership in the province. We were not informed and we are not happy at all,” he said. “It is wrong for chiefs from other provinces to walk into our province without the knowledge of the chiefs in this province.”
Labels: JABULANI SIBANDA
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