Zanu-PF Politburo member Cde George Peter Rutanhire has died.
Cde Rutanhire succumbed to renal failure at Karanda Hospital in Mt
Darwin early yesterday. Mashonaland Central Provincial Affairs Minister
Advocate Martin Dinha confirmed the death.
“On behalf of Mashonaland Central, I wish to convey my deepest
condolences and sorrow to the Rutanhire family and the whole family of
Zimbabwe over the untimely death of this gallant son of the soil,” said
Adv Dinha.
“His heroism ad selfless dedication to the liberation of Zimbabwe is
illustrious. At one point, he and his wife saved me from imminent death
after some people had conspired to poison me at a function in Mt Darwin.
I am hurt by Cde Rutanhire’s death.”
Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans’ Association provincial
chairman (Mashonaland Central) Cde Sam Parirenyatwa said they would
request national hero status for the veteran of the Second Chimurenga
that led to Zimbabwe’s Independence in 1980.
“We have requested the party’s Politburo to confer national hero
status on Cde Rutanhire. Our application will be in the Politburo office
by (Sunday) morning.
“We are, however, disturbed that this gallant fighter was taken to
hospital in an old truck, which broke down along the way and had to get
to hospital in a scotchcart.”
Born Jackson Musanhu, Cde Rutanhire joined the Second Chimurenga in
the early 1970s after encountering Zanla fighters at St Albert’s Mission
where he was a catechist.
He and his wife left for Mapapai Base, Mozambique, in 1972 after having been sold out to
Rhodesian operatives.
Cde Rutanhire went for military training in Tanzania later that year,
becoming one of the foremost prosecutors of the armed struggle.
He was among the signatories to the famous Mgagao Declaration, which unequivocally pronounced President Mugabe leader of Zanu.
After Independence, Cde Rutanhire held several posts in Government
and Zanu-PF, and was elevated to the Politburo in 2010, a position he
held until the time of his death.
He was head of the Chitepo Ideological College, and chair of the Fallen Heroes Trust of Zimbabwe, which —
among other things — has been at the forefront of identifying mass
graves of people butchered by the colonial regime prior to Independence. Sunday Mail
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