Mourners have descended on the
town of Ulundi ahead of Saturday's funeral of veteran South African politician
and Zulu chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi.
He has been granted a state
funeral in honor of his contribution to the fight against white-minority rule.
As a mark of respect, the
national power firm has also agreed that Ulundi will not be subject to the national
rolling electricity cuts during the events.
But his death at the age of
95 has opened up a debate about his legacy.
Born into the Zulu royal
family, he remained their traditional prime minister until his death. However,
it was his role in politics that has split opinions.
He founded the Zulu nationalist
Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) after becoming disillusioned with the African
National Congress (ANC) in 1975 at the height of apartheid. He opposed the
ANC's stance on armed action and sanctions, arguing that they harmed black
South Africans.
For this, his supporters
believe he deserves all the accolades being showered on him - and the hundreds
of people who lined the streets on Friday leading to the Kwa-Phindangene Palace
in Ulundi, along with praise-singing Zulu regiments clad in traditional attire,
see him as a man of peace.
Prof Kealeboga Maphunye,
head of African politics at the University of South Africa, acknowledges
Buthelezi was "a respected traditional leader who made a contribution in
history in ensuring that the dignity of black people, particularly Zulus, was
not trampled on by the apartheid regime".
Yet it was what happened
during the transition to multi-party democracy in the early 1990s when an
estimated 20,000 people died in violence between the ANC and IFP, that has
drawn criticism and opened up old wounds.
"We cannot forget that
Buthelezi's supporters were involved in acts that undermined his legacy,"
Prof Maphunye told the BBC.
The City Press newspaper
editor-in-chief Mondli Makhanya was more forthright in his front-page
editorial, a day after Buthelezi's death, calling him a "murderous
apartheid collaborator who was behind hit squads linked to his
organisation".
Makhanya went on to
describe positive tributes about him as "the culmination of the greatest
whitewashing of history that South Africa has seen".
Thokoza township in the
east of Johannesburg is one of many areas that experienced political violence
by those determined to derail the road to the country's first democratic
elections in 1994.
A monument to the 600
people who died there now stands on Khumalo Street, once the dividing line
between two warring communities.
On Thursday people gathered
at the memorial determined that their relatives who died would not be forgotten
at this time.
"I lost my uncle
during the violent clashes. He was bludgeoned to death," a man, who asked
not to be named, told the BBC.
He had called on Buthelezi
to "humble" himself and apologize for the atrocities that were
committed in his name. "But instead of apologizing, he denied involvement
till his death," he said.
The IFP has dismissed these
criticisms, saying neither Buthelezi nor his party can be blamed for planning
the violence. After Nelson Mandela won the country's first democratic
elections, he and Buthelezi buried the hatchet and the IFP leader went on to
serve two terms as home affairs minister in the ANC government.
Buthelezi's son, Prince
Zuzifa, said: "The IFP shares our pain in seeing long-discredited
propaganda revived by a few individuals who have no sense of humanity but we
will not be drawn into their spiral of hatred… history will vindicate our
father."
Events to commemorate the
Zulu leader began on Wednesday in Ulundi with a memorial service organized by
the IFP and addressed by dignitaries and politicians of all parties.
But this too has become
overshadowed by accusations that some are using the commemorations to play
politics ahead of elections next year, with politicians accused of being
prepared to revise history with votes in mind.
This criticism has
particularly been leveled at the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), the
country's second-largest opposition party launched 10 years ago.
Its head of political
education, Mbuyiseni Ndlozi, took to the stage to praise the IFP founder:
"Never be shaken by the negativity of ill-informed, ignorant people.
"Never be shaken by
opportunists, hypocrites who want to educate us about our own history and the
leadership that stabilized this country into a politically peaceful
environment," he told the crowd of mourners.
For the IFP the funeral is
also a good opportunity to canvas for votes and for other parties to woo a
possible coalition partner in KwaZulu-Natal province, the homeland of the country's
largest ethnic group.
Buthelezi retired from
active politics five years ago but recently won praise for overseeing the
peaceful installation of the recently crowned Zulu monarch Misuzulu ka
Zwelithini, amid a battle for the throne among his brothers.
However, it was reported
that he and the king were at loggerheads recently over the running and
management of the Ingonyama Trust, a body with the role of managing communal
land in KwaZulu Natal province.
Buthelezi regarded the
trust as one of his great successes - and its creation did pave the way for the
IFP to participate in the 1994 elections - although it has come in for
criticism, with some seeing it as unconstitutional, as it leaves millions of
people in rural areas under the rule of the king.
But for historian
Mphumeleli Ngidi, Buthelezi's nearly 70 years of service show an unfailing
dedication to preserving Zulu customs and rituals at a critical juncture in
South Africa's history - and for this alone, there is no doubt he will be
revered.
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