Simon Muzenda
First Vice-President of Zimbabwe
In office
31 December 1987  20 September 2003
PresidentRobert Mugabe
Succeeded byJoice Mujuru (2004)
Deputy Prime Minister of Zimbabwe
In office
18 April 1980  22 December 1987
PresidentCanaan Banana
Prime MinisterRobert Mugabe
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
18 April 1980  1 January 1981
GovernorChristopher Soames, Baron Soames (11 December 1979 – 18 April 1980)
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byArthur Mutambara and Thokozani Khuphe
Personal details
Born
Simon Vengai Muzenda

(1922-10-28)28 October 1922
Gutu district, Southern Rhodesia
Died20 September 2003(2003-09-20) (aged 80)
Harare, Zimbabwe
Cause of deathKidney failure
Resting placeNational Heroes Acre
NationalityZimbabwean
Political partyZANU-PF
Spouse
Maud Muzenda
(m. 1950)
Relations
  • Davison Muzenda (brother)
  • Otilia Mazvitireni Muzenda (sister)
  • Chikwereti Muzenda (brother)
  • Dadire Muzenda (sister)
Children
  • Tsitsi Muzenda
  • Vitalis Vengesai Muzenda
  • Chikwereti Martin Muzenda
  • Virginia Muzenda
  • Ignatius Dewa Muzenda
  • Tendai Muzenda-Ngcobo
  • Tongai Matthew Muzenda
Parents
  • Muzenda Chekesai Murefu
  • Theresa Muchapedzei Chekasi
Residence(s)Chisipite, Harare
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionCarpenter
NicknameDr Mzee
[1][2][3]

Simon Vengai Muzenda (28 October 1922 – 20 September 2003) was a Zimbabwean politician who served as Deputy Prime Minister from 1980 to 1987 and as Vice-President of Zimbabwe from 1987 to 2003 under President Robert Mugabe.

Early life and education

Muzenda was born in October 1922 in Gutu District of the Victoria Province of Southern Rhodesia as a son of peasant farmers; Theresa Muchapedzei Chekasi and Muzenda Chekesai Murefu.[1] Muzenda was brought up by his grandmother Mbuya Maweni, who ensured his regular attendance for his primary education at Nyamandi Primary School.[1]

Life and career

A relatively bright child, he was sent for teacher training after spending his teenage years herding in Makonese Village under Chief Nyamandi, and, following the advice of his tutor, travelled to the Marianhill mission in Natal, South Africa, where he showed proficiency in carpentry.

Between completing his carpentry course and furthering his studies, Muzenda became aware of politics during contacts with fellow students, which included several men prominent in black activism South Africa and Rhodesia; after his return to Rhodesia in 1950, he worked in a furniture factory in Bulawayo and became involved with Benjamin Burombo, an activist who was among the earliest to challenge discriminatory laws.

After marrying his wife Maud, a nurse, Muzenda moved to the Midlands town of Mvuma in 1955 and started his own carpentry business; he also stayed active in political activism and eventually become administrative secretary of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), attracting the attention of Rhodesian security forces and being imprisoned in Salisbury Central Prison for two years, which he described as a "place of study" later in his life, as it gave him and his fellow inmates the opportunity to complete their educations.

In 1964, he was arrested again, this time for possession of a pistol after having been elected deputy organising secretary of ZANU; at this time, Muzenda had become convinced that the only way to overthrow white colonial dominance was an armed revolution, and began organising young blacks to receive military training in other African countries, in the Soviet Union and in China. He was soon imprisoned again and remained in jail until being released under the Anglo-Rhodesia agreement in 1971.

Following his release, Simon Muzenda went into exile in Zambia, and later in Mozambique. Failing to draw Joshua Nkomo and his ZAPU movement into a unified political front, he backed Robert Mugabe, who was then also hiding in Mozambique, as the leader of the ZANU Patriotic Front (PF).

After the ensuing guerilla war, which ended with the Lancaster House Agreement, and a brief interregnum of British government while new elections were organised, Mugabe was elected as the first prime minister of the new independent Zimbabwe and made Muzenda the deputy prime minister and foreign minister in 1980; Muzenda also retained political power over his home area. In 1987, when Mugabe became executive president, Muzenda was appointed as his vice-president.

In Zimbabwe's early years, Muzenda was generally respected by the people as a no-nonsense, plain-spoken man from the working class, but in later years, he appeared more and more crude. In 1990, his campaign for a seat in Zimbabwe's parliament suffered a blow after opposition candidate Patrick Kombayi was shot and left permanently disabled; two state agents were convicted of attempted murder, but pardoned by Mugabe shortly after the trial ended, and even though Muzenda was not publicly accused of being involved in the shooting, it affected his standing with the public.

During the years of Mugabe's rule, Muzenda always gave unreserved backing to the president, even when the regime began muzzling the independent press, curb the activities of foreign correspondents and crushing political opposition. He also participated in Mugabe's land redistribution programme, taking over the Chindito farm, south of Harare, in April 2002 and ejecting the white farm owner, Chris Nel; this incident caused a controversy with the Commercial Farmers Union.[4] In addition, he was put on the United States sanctions list in 2003 and remained on the list until his death.[5]

Death

In the two years preceding his death, Muzenda was in failing health, with problems including hypertension and diabetes; after returning from medical treatment in China in July 2003, he was admitted to the coronary care unit of Harare's main government facility, the Parirenyatwa Hospital, where, according to medical sources, he fell into a semi-conscious state. Two weeks before his death, Zimbabwe's state-owned media dismissed reports that he was in declining health, instead announcing that he was making "remarkable progress" towards a full recovery.[6] Muzenda died on 20 September 2003; he was 80 years old.[7][2] He was survived by a wife and six children.[8] He had a State funeral, and he is buried at the National Heroes Acre.

See also

Further reading

  • Ngwabi, Bhebhe (2004). Simon Vengayi Muzenda and the Struggle for, and the Liberation of Zimbabwe. Harare, Zimbabwe: Mambo Press. ISBN 086922-780-7.

References

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