Matemadanda declared national hero

Source: Matemadanda declared national hero – herald President Mnangagwa Wallace Ruzvidzo Herald Reporter President Mnangagwa has declared Ambassador Victor Matemadanda a national hero, describing him as a “war veteran who became part of the leadership of the association of our Liberation Veterans after Independence.” The message was conveyed to the family last night by Politburo […]

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Source: Matemadanda declared national hero – herald

Wallace Ruzvidzo

Herald Reporter

President Mnangagwa has declared Ambassador Victor Matemadanda a national hero, describing him as a “war veteran who became part of the leadership of the association of our Liberation Veterans after Independence.”

The message was conveyed to the family last night by Politburo member Cde Simbarashe Mumbengegwi.

The President also extended his heartfelt condolences to the Matemadanda family yesterday.

Cde Matemadanda, who died on Saturday, was Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to Mozambique and the Kingdom of Eswatini.

He was 66.

In his condolence message, the President said he learnt of the news with deep sorrow, describing the late diplomat as a committed war veteran whose nationalist convictions can be traced back to his youthful years as part of the Zimbabwean migrant community that settled in Zambia to escape persecution under the Rhodesian settler colonial regime.

“I learnt with deep grief and sadness of the untimely demise on Saturday night of Cde Victor Matemadanda, Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to the sister Republics of Mozambique and Eswatini.

“A war veteran who became part of the leadership of the association of our Liberation Veterans after Independence, the late Cde Matemadanda’s association with nationalist politics and the National Liberation Struggle for our Independence dated back to his youthful days as part of the Zimbabwean migrant community, which had settled in Zambia to escape persecution and inhibitions in the then-settler colonial Rhodesia,” he said.

President Mnangagwa said Cde Matemadanda left the relative stability of migrant life in Zambia to join the struggle, initially mobilising support for fighters and refugees in camps in Zambia and Mozambique, including efforts led by figures such as the late Cde Patrick Kombayi.

He chronicled how the late Ambassador later became more directly involved in the liberation struggle by helping with the transportation of war material, using large trucks to deliver supplies to forward operational points.

“At Independence, Cde Matemadanda would join the Zimbabwe National Army, in which role he served his country with loyalty and utmost distinction.

“After leaving the army, he continued to advance the interests of the party, and war veterans through the Veterans Association, which he helped lead,” said President Mnangagwa.

“His principled stance in defence of the interests of our war veterans, including their welfare and substantive incorporation into Party structures, led to his repeated incarceration under the First Republic”.

Cde Matemadanda later served as the ruling Party’s National Political Commissar, a role in which the President said he brought “exceptional vibrancy to the Party, which at the time sought to put behind it the largely fossilised ethos and inertia which had developed over time under the First Republic”.

As Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to Mozambique and Eswatini, the President said, Cde Matemadanda distinguished himself by travelling across all provinces in Mozambique that housed Zimbabwe’s wartime bases.

He said the Ambassador pushed for the rehabilitation of burial sites and shrines, as a sign of respect and dignity to Zimbabwe’s fallen heroes and heroines.

“To broaden his vista as one of the promising cadres in the leadership of the Party, I took the decision to introduce and redeploy him into our diplomatic service as Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to Mozambique and Eswatini. He distinguished himself in that role, traversing all the Provinces in Mozambique which housed our wartime bases, and in which remains of countless Zimbabwean freedom fighters lie buried in mass graves,” said President Mnangagwa.

He said it was unfortunate that Cde Matemadanda died before completing the programme of rehabilitation and curation of the revered sites, adding that under the Second Republic, Government will ensure that the burial grounds and shrines are properly rehabilitated and curated.

“This is the least we can do to honour our fallen heroes, and to pay lasting tribute to the late Cde Matemadanda.

“On behalf of the Party, ZANU PF, Government, my family and my behalf, I wish to express my deepest, heartfelt condolences to the bereaved Matemadanda Family, especially to Amai Matemadanda and the children in this, their hour of profound grief.

“May they derive solace from the exceptional contribution which Ambassador Matemadanda made towards the freedom and development of his people, whom he so deeply loved. Our nation joins them and shares in their grief. May his dear soul rest in eternal peace,” said President Mnangagwa.

The Minister of Veterans of the Liberation Struggle Affairs, Senator Monica Mavhunga and the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Professor Amon Murwira, were among the top Government officials who visited the Matemadanda home in Harare to pay their condolences.

Cde Matemadanda’s oldest son and family spokesperson, Terrence, said he was lost for words.

“We are at a loss for words as a family because it happened suddenly, it is not something we expected or saw coming,” he said tearfully.

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