Johannesburg - The Zimbabwe pastor who launched a social media campaign
criticising the government and then left the country for his safety is
calling for a massive but peaceful uprising.
| Zimbabwean pastor Evan Mawarire holds his country's flag whilst singing national anthem before addressing his supporters at Wits. (Themba Hadebe, AP) |
Evan Mawarire told an emotional crowd at Wits University on Thursday
night that Zimbabwe once was promising but had been reduced to "horror
and unimaginable disappointment."
Frustration has been growing in
the southern African nation amid a collapsing economy and allegations of
corruption. People across the country earlier this month staged the
largest anti-government strike in nearly a decade.
President
Robert Mugabe, who has been in power since 1980 and is the world's
oldest head of state at 92, has responded by saying that people who
aren't happy should leave.
'Catastrophe has been our story for far too long'
Many
have. Most of the people cheering, laughing and crying in the audience
on Thursday night were from Zimbabwe, part of an exodus of hundreds of
thousands of people into neighbouring South Africa over the years.
Mawarire
said Zimbabwe's government "cannot deal with people that are genuinely
peaceful," and he called on fellow citizens to rewrite the country's
future. "Catastrophe has been our story for far too long," he said.
He also addressed concerns that he had left the country for good, while acknowledging the risks involved in speaking out.
"My
country is Zimbabwe. It is my home. I live there," he said. "If you are
going to arrest me, you will arrest me at home. If you are going to
kill me, you will kill me at home."
Mawarire has refused to engage in violence.
"Violence
begets violence, and that is something that you and I have to make a
decision to be different on going forward," he told the crowd.
News24
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