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By Institute for Continuing History
2
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The podcast currently has 8 episodes available.
This series, ‘Apartheid’s black ops in Zimbabwe’, examines the acts of espionage, assassination, sabotage and subversion conducted by the South Africa within the borders of its northern neighbour during the 1980s. It also looks at the men who pulled the triggers and planted the bombs, as well as the impact of their actions, in what was a turbulent and sometimes devastating period for Zimbabwe and the region.
Episode 2 covers the escalation of the clandestine battle at the end of 1981, investigating the fallout from the Gqabi killing, the sabotage of Zimbabwe’s national ammunition depot, the bombing of Zanu (PF) headquarters, and CIO’s intensifying pursuit of South African moles.
This series, ‘The Taste of Poison: Apartheid’s black ops in Zimbabwe’, examines the acts of espionage, assassination, sabotage and subversion conducted by South Africa within the borders of its northern neighbour during the 1980s. It also looks at the men who pulled the triggers and planted the bombs, as well as the impact of their actions, in what was a turbulent and sometimes devastating period for Zimbabwe and the region.
Episode 1 outlines the genesis of the Apartheid state’s policy towards Zimbabwe, and investigates its first cross-border operations, including the killing of ANC representative Joe Gqabi.
The Indonesian massacres of 1965 and 1966 were described by the CIA as ‘one of the ghastliest and most concentrated bloodlettings’ of the Cold War—and were responsible for up to a million deaths, according to some estimates. As such, they are comparable with some of the worst mass killings of the Century, but have remained relatively unknown. In this podcast, the Institute for Continuing History explores the growing body of research on the massacres that has emerged since the fall of Indonesia’s military regime in the late 1990s.
Episode 4 investigates the abduction by bandits of six foreign tourists in Matabeleland during 1982. Robert Mugabe’s government accused Joshua Nkomo’s party, Zapu, of sponsoring ‘dissidents’—and alleged that the people of Matabeleland were working hand-in-glove with such ‘hyenas’ to subvert national security. A close examination of the incident—and of what members of government were saying behind closed doors—shows the allegations to have been propaganda. Key decision-makers knew that there was no elaborate conspiracy at play in Matabeleland, but used the tourist abduction to militarise the continuing assault on Zapu and its supporters.
For those unfamiliar with 1980s Zimbabwe, see ICH’s basic introduction to the topic: https://www.continuinghistory.org/zim-background
Episode 3 examines the arms caches ‘crisis’ of 1982—the ‘discovery’ of massive reserves of weapons that belonged to Zipra, the former military wing of Robert Mugabe’s rival, Joshua Nkomo. Zanu-PF declared it had nipped a coup plot in the bud, and terminated the unity government with Nkomo that had been formed at independence. Repressive measures against Nkomo’s party and former members of Zipra intensified alongside an increasingly shrill official narrative, which portrayed Zanu’s opponents as an imminent and escalating threat to national security. Yet events behind the scenes show clearly that the arms caches crisis was staged by Mugabe because Nkomo had refused demands for Zapu to be absorbed into Zanu-PF. Like most of the turning points that formed the backdrop to the Gukurahundi, the arms caches affair was driven by politics and hatred, not the treacherous activities of a nefarious rival.
This series, ‘Smooth Lies & Sharp Knives: the Road to Gukurahundi’, investigates the events and ideas that led to mass killings in Matabeleland, Zimbabwe, during 1983 and 1984. Episode 2 looks at the Entumbane fighting of 1980-81 between the forces of Robert Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo. Zanu-PF propaganda represented this (and other incidents) as one of a series of subversive acts which eventually necessitated the deployment of 5 Brigade in 1983. But a close examination of the Entumbane ‘disturbances’, based on historical documents, demonstrates that it was Mugabe and Zanu, not Nkomo and Zapu, who provoked this showdown. The aim was destroy Zapu’s militarily shield so that the party would be incapable of resisting an open assault.
For those unfamiliar with 1980s Zimbabwe, see ICH’s basic introduction to the topic: https://www.continuinghistory.org/zim-background
This series, ‘Smooth Lies & Sharp Knives: the Road to Gukurahundi’, looks at the events and ideas that led to mass killings in Matabeleland, Zimbabwe, during 1983 and 1984. Episode 1 traces the development of the ideology that made the killings possible—namely, a desire for absolute domination and an obsession with its political manifestations. A one-party state was the most prized of those symbols because it encapsulated the obliteration of all opposition and the unchallenged supremacy of the ruling party. After independence in 1980, Robert Mugabe and his Zanu-PF party set themselves to attain a one-party state, a determination that explains the most tumultuous events of Zimbabwe’s first decade.
For those unfamiliar with 1980s Zimbabwe, see ICH's basic introduction to the topic: https://www.continuinghistory.org/zim-background
The podcast currently has 8 episodes available.