FAHAMU KUHUSU MAISHA YA OSCAR KAMBONA WAKATI WA UTAWALA WA MWALIMU NYERERE
katika pita pita yangu mtandaoni nikakutana na habari inayohusu maisha ya Oscar Kambona kiongozi aliyewahi kuiongoza Tanzania nimekuwa kumsikia katika historia ya Tanzania lakini ni tofauti na vile nilikuwa najua lakini baada ya kusoma ndio nikajua vizuri maisha yake, habari hii ni ndefu lakini natumaini utaweza kuisoma, nimeshindwa kuibadili kwenda kwenye kiswahili kwani inahitaji muda wa kutosha.
Early
years
Kambona was born on 13 August 1928
on the shores of Lake Nyasa in a small village called Kwambe near Mbamba Bay in
the district of Mbinga near Songea in southern Tanganyika. He died in London in July 1997.
He was the son of the Reverend David
Kambona and Miriam Kambona. Reverend David Kambona belonged to the first group
of African priests to be ordained into the Anglican Church of Tanganyika.
Kambona received his primary school
education at home under a mango tree in his home village. The tree still stands
today. He was taught by his parents and by an uncle, all of whom were teachers.
He was then sent to St Barnabas
Middle School in Liuli in southern Tanganyika not far from his home. He also
attended Alliance Secondary School in Dodoma in central Tanganyika.
A British Anglican bishop paid Oscar
Kambona's school fees because his father could not afford to do so. The school
fees were 30 Pounds per year. Kambona is reported to have said he convinced the
Anglican bishop to pay his school fees by reciting the Lord's Prayer in
English.
He was then selected to attend
Tabora Boys’ Senior Government School where he first met Julius Nyerere who was
already teaching at St. Mary's, a Catholic school in the town of Tabora.
Political
career
Kambona became the secretary-general
of the Tanganyika African National Union
(TANU) during the struggle for independence and worked closely with Nyerere who
was president of TANU, the party which led Tanganyika to independence.
Tanganyika won independence from Britain on 9 December 1961. The two were
the most prominent leaders of the independence movement in Tanganyika in the
1950s.
Oscar Kambona was a charismatic
leader who also had great influence among the leaders of the African liberation
movements based in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, second only to Nyerere, after the
country won independence.
He was a shining star in the
constellation of Tanganyikan (later Tanzanian) politicians and it was widely
believed that he would be the next president of the country if Nyerere no
longer ran for office or stepped down for whatever reason. His stature as
Nyerere's heir apparent or successor was enhanced when, as defence minister, he
calmed down soldiers who could have overthrown the government.
That was during the army mutiny in
January 1964 when President Nyerere and Vice President Rashidi Kawawa
were taken to a safe place by the members of the intelligence service in case
the soldiers wanted to harm them.
It was Oscar Kambona, alone, who confronted
the soldiers and negotiated with them. He drove himself to the army barracks to
talk to the army mutineers and listen to their demands. The soldiers wanted
their salaries increased and British army officers replaced by African
officers.
There was, however, suspicion that
some elements in the government and in the labour movement secretly worked with
the soldiers to create a tense situation in an attempt to overthrow President
Nyerere.
Kambona obviously was not one of
them. Had he wanted to, he could have used the opportunity to seize power. He
was popular with the soldiers and they trusted him. He was also, during that
time, minister of defence.
Soldiers in neighbouring Kenya and Uganda also mutinied around the same time,
within the next two days after Tanganyika's army mutiny which took place on 20
January, and made the same demands their counterparts did in Tanganyika.
The army mutinies in the three African Great Lakes countries were suppressed by British troops who had been
flown from Aden
and Britain
at the request of the nations' three respective leaders (Julius Nyerere
of Tanganyika, Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya, and Milton Obote
of Uganda). Other British troops came from neighbouring Kenya. The mutinies
were over in only a few days.
After Nyerere came out of seclusion,
he publicly thanked Oscar Kambona, whom he called "my colleague," for
defusing a potentially dangerous situation.
In fact, when the soldiers remained
defiant, it was Oscar Kambona who persuaded Nyerere to seek immediate
assistance from the former colonial power, Britain, to suppress the mutiny.
The two leaders had been close
political allies and personal friends since the days of the independence
struggle when they were the main leaders of the independence movement. In fact,
when Kambona got married to a former Miss Tanganyika at a cathedral in London,
Nyerere was his best man.
But the two leaders started drifting
apart a few years after independence. The first rift occurred in 1964 during
the army mutiny, and then in 1965 when Tanzania officially became a one-party
state.
As a cabinet member, Oscar Kambona
supported the transition to a one-party state but did so reluctantly, only as a
team player.
He was opposed to the change because
he said there was no mechanism guaranteeing change of government by
constitutional means in a country dominated by one party. He also contended
that there were no constitutional safeguards to make sure that the country did
not drift into dictatorship.
The next split with Nyerere came in
February 1967 when Tanzania adopted the Arusha Declaration, an economic and political blueprint for the transformation
of Tanzania into a socialist state.
Kambona was opposed to this
fundamental change and argued that the government should first launch a pilot
scheme to see if the policy was going to work on a national scale.
Tanzania's socialist policy was
mainly based on the establishment of ujamaa villages, roughly equivalent to
communes or the Kibbutz in Israel, so that the people could live and work together
for their collective well-being and make it easier for the government to
provide them with basic services such as water supply, medical treatment at
clinics, and education by building schools which could be within short distance
from the villages.
Oscar Kambona argued that it was
important, first, to show the people that living in ujamaa villages, or
collective communities, was beneficial and a good idea. He said that could be
done by establishing a few ujamaa villages in different parts of the country as
a pilot scheme to demonstrate the viability of those villages and show the
people the benefits they would get if they agreed to live together and work
together on communal farms.
The debate, conducted mostly in
private when the delegates of the ruling party TANU were discussing in a public
forum the document of the Arusha Declaration, was between Oscar Kambona on one
side and Julius Nyerere as well as Vice President Rashid Kawawa on the other
side.
They were the country's three main
and most powerful and most influential leaders and met privately away from the
delegates at the conference in Arusha to resolve their differences.
The private meeting and debate went
on for quite some time during the duration of the conference and whenever the
subject came up, whether or not Tanzania should adopt socialist policies and
establish ujamaa villages, Kawawa always supported Nyerere against Kambona.
The two (Kambona and Kawawa) became
bitter enemies thereafter. In fact, they started going separate ways even
before then because Kambona saw Kawawa as no more than a "puppet" of
Nyerere, manipulated at will, and who agreed with everything Nyerere said and
wanted. However, when he was interviewed shortly after Kambona's death, Kawawa
made a public statement that he "had no disagreement with Kambona and
worked well with him as a colleague throughout." The interview was
broadcast by Radio Tanzania in 1997.
Kambona was the only cabinet member
who challenged Nyerere and stood up to him and saw him as his equal. There was
probably another cabinet member, Chief Abdallah Said Fundikira III, Tanganyika's first minister of constitutional affairs, who
not long after independence left the cabinet over disagreements with Nyerere.
Fundikira had known Nyerere since their student days at Makerere University
College in Uganda in the early 1940s.
But the differences between Kambona
and Nyerere were fundamentally ideological and more than just a dispute over
the way ujamaa villages should be established.
Kambona was opposed to socialism. He
was not a socialist like Nyerere. He was a capitalist. He was also opposed to
Chinese communist influence in Tanzania and believed that Nyerere's brand of
socialism would be patterned after Chinese communist policies. He also believed
that Chinese leader Mao Tse Tung had undue and profound influence on Nyerere.
He attributed that to Nyerere's first visit to the People's Republic of China
in 1965, contending that it was after this trip that Nyerere decided to
establish a one-party state after he returned to Tanzania.
But Kambona lost. The Arusha
Declaration, Tanzania's socialist manifesto and political blueprint, was
adopted in February 1967 and socialism
became Tanzania's official policy.
Exile
A few months later, in July 1967,
Oscar Kambona left Tanzania with his wife and children and went into
"self-imposed" exile in London.
It was first reported that he
sneaked out of the country and drove all the way to Nairobi,
Kenya,
a neighbouring country. But it is highly unlikely that the members of the
Tanzania's intelligence service were not aware of his departure. The government
simply let him go. They could have stopped him, and could even have arrested
him, if they wanted to.
After he left and when his departure
was reported in Tanzania's newspapers and on the radio, President Nyerere
himself at a public rally in Dar es Salaam,
the capital, talked about Kambona and said "Let him go." He also said
Kambona left with a lot of money and wondered how he got all that money which
did not match his salary.
There were rumours that one of the
ways he enriched himself when he was in office was by taking some of the money
which was intended to go to the liberation movements based in Tanzania.
He was during that period also
chairman of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) Liberation Committee
overseeing liberation movements based in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in addition
to his ministerial position as minister of external affairs.
The allegations that he
misappropriated some of the funds intended for the liberation struggle in
Southern Africa, and got more money from other sources illegally or by
unscrupulous means, was repeated on 12 January 1968, when President Nyerere
challenged Oscar Kambona to return to Tanzania and testify before a judicial
commission that he had not deposited large sums of money in his account, and
explain where he got it from since it far exceeded his salary.
Kambona responded to the allegations
by requesting the Tanzanian government in a press conference in London in 1968
to hold a public investigation into his personal wealth and publish the
findings. The government did not do that.
It is also highly unlikely that
Kambona misappropriated wealth since he spent most of his life in exile living
in subsidised council housing for poor income families.
Tony Laurence, in his book The
Dar Mutiny of 1964 published by Book Guild Publishing, states that, fearing
for his life, Kambona went to live in exile in Britain without any financial
support and took a number of low-paying jobs
to support himself and his family. Yet, during all that time, Kambona conducted
himself with dignity, and with a sense of humour in spite of the hardship, and
was a friend of other people also living in exile. Some of them were in a
better financial position than he was.
Nyerere's challenge to Kambona,
asking him to account for his money, was reported in Tanzania's newspapers and
by Radio Tanzania Dar es Salaam (RTD) during that time. It has also been
documented by Jacqueline Audrey Kalley in her voluminous work, Southern
African Political History: A Chronology of Key Political Events from
Independence to Mid-1997.
There was also disagreement on the
way Kambona's exile was described.
Reports in Tanzania said he went
into "self-imposed" exile but, to Kambona and his supporters as well
as other observers, he was forced to leave Tanzania because he had fallen out
with Nyerere and did not feel that he would be safe or lead a normal life in a
hostile political climate.
Speculation that he may have been in
imminent danger just before he left was somewhat confirmed when his house in
Magomeni, Dar es Salaam, was destroyed by the security forces and the soldiers
of the Tanzania People's Defence Forces (TPDF) although not demolished. The
destruction is shown in a photograph on the web site of the Kambona Foundation.
The destruction of the house, after
Kambona left, seemed to have been some kind of warning or simply a scare tactic
and it probably achieved its purpose, especially with regard to Kambona's
supporters in Tanzania. It probably meant, "this is what we have in store
for you," or "this is what you are going to get," if you
continue to support Kambona. And "this is what would have happened to him
had he stayed."
That may be just one of the
interpretations - why his house was destroyed. There may be other
interpretations of the government's motives for sanctioning that.
But fear for his security and
freedom was real, further confirmed when his two younger brothers, Mattiya
Kambona and Otini Kambona, were arrested around the same time he fled to
London. They were detained for many years until President Nyerere released
them.
From his sanctuary in London, Oscar
Kambona became a bitter critic and opponent of President Nyerere and his policies.
He was even invited by the Nigerian
military government of Yakubu Gowon
in June 1968 to go and lecture in Nigeria after Tanzania
recognised Biafra
(the first country to do so in April that year), thus infuriating Nigerian
leaders for supporting the secession of the Eastern Region of the Nigerian
Federation.
During his lecture tour of Nigeria
in June 1968, Kambona denounced Nyerere as a dictator and accused the Tanzanian
government of supplying weapons to Biafra.
In a lecture in Lagos on 14 June
1968, he also said weapons and ammunition sent to Tanzania for the Zimbabwe
African People's Union (ZAPU) freedom fighters had been diverted by Nyerere and
sent to Biafra; and went on to say that Tanzania's recognition of Biafra as a
sovereign nation had damaged the country's reputation in Africa and elsewhere.
Tanzania recognised Biafra for moral
reasons because of the refusal and unwillingness of the local and the federal
authorities to stop the massacre of Igbos and other Easterners in Northern
Nigeria and other parts of the country, but especially in the North.
Nigerian leaders were also quick to
remind Nyerere that it was Nigerian troops who had saved him and provided
security and defence for Tanganyika after the army mutiny in Tanganyika in 1964
when Nyerere appealed to fellow Africans for troops to temporarily provide
defence while the Tanganyikan government was building a new army. Nigeria,
under the leadership of President Nnamdi Azikiwe
and Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa, immediately responded to Nyerere's request.
Kambona was also quick to remind his
listeners in Nigeria, and even in Britain where lived, that it was he who
calmed down the soldiers when they mutinied while President Nyerere and Vice
President Kawawa went into hiding, "in a grass hut," as he put it.
Coup
Leader
Not long after Kambona got ample
publicity during his lecture tour of Nigeria in 1968 denouncing Nyerere, he was
again in the news in Tanzania and other African countries and elsewhere. He was
accused of masterminding a coup attempt to overthrow Nyerere1.
The coup was to take place in
October 1969. But all the alleged conspirators were arrested before the fateful
date, except Kambona who was living in London.
The alleged plotters were charged
with treason. The chief witness for the prosecution was Potlako Leballo,
president of the Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC), a South African liberation
group based in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Leballo took over the leadership of the
organisation after its first president, Mangaliso Roberto Sobukwe, were
imprisoned by the apartheid regime.
Leballo had gained the confidence of
the coup plotters while he was working for Tanzania's intelligence service. His
testimony proved critical in securirng a conviction of the accused during the
treason trial presided over by Chief Justice Phillip Telfer Georges, a
Trinidadian. The leading government attorney, besides Attorney-General Mark
Bomani, was Nathaniel King, also from Trinidad.
Kambona was the first accused and
was charged in absentia.
There were reports that he would be
extradited to Tanzania but he never was. The Tanzanian government did not seek
his extradition. It is also highly unlikely that the British government would
have sent him back to Tanzania even if the two countries had an extradition
treaty.
And since he did not appear in court
during the treason trial, he was not convicted. He could not have been
convicted in a fair trial without himself being there to defend himself.
During the trial, prosecuting
attorney, Nathaniel King, said the coup plotters also intended to assassinate
President Nyerere. He asked one of the accused, John Lifa Chipaka, what he
meant when he said - in their secret communications obtained by the Tanzania
intelligence service - they were going "to eliminate" Nyerere.
Chipaka responded by saying, "Eliminate him politically, not
physically."
Chief Justice Phillip Telfer Georges
asked him the same question and was not convinced that Chipaka was telling the
truth.
Also the Chief Justice said the list
of names found on the younger brother of John Chipaka, Eliya Dunstan Chipaka who
was a captain, was not the kind of list one would expect to be a list of guests
invited to a wedding. It was a list of army officers, potential participants in
the planned coup, who were going to be approached or had already been
approached by the conspirators to see if they could take part in the plot to
overthrow the government. The list included officers from both sides of the
union: Tanzania mainland and Zanzibar.
The Chipaka brothers were cousins of
Oscar Kambona.
The court proceedings were reported
in the newspapers and on the radio and they were open to the public. The
records of those proceedidngs can be obtained from different sources, including
newspapers from that period, and many documented works. They quote what the
accused, the prosecuting attorneys, and the chief justice said during the
trial.
The transcript of the court
proceedings, reported in Tanzanian newspapers and elsewhere, is also reproduced
in Godfrey Mwakikagile, Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era.
While his co-conspirators were languishing
in prison after being convicted of treason, Oscar Kambona continued to
criticise Nyerere from his safe haven in London through the years, while
nurturing ambitions to return into the political arena in his home country
where he once was a bright star in the 1960s before he fled to London.
Return
of the "prodigal son"
It was not until 1992 after Tanzania
adopted multiparty democracy that Kambona returned to lead one of the
opposition parties after 25 years living in exile. He was the most prominent figure
on the opposition side during that time after he returned to his home country.
And he was in a combative mood. Even
before he left London, he challenged the Tanzanian government to arrest him on
his arrival in Tanzania, vowing that he was returning to Tanzania regardless of
consequences and to clear his name before the people of Tanzania . He was not
arrested.
But that was not the end of his
ordeal.
The
beginning of the end
A campaign by the government was
started to vilify him again. First was the claim that he was not a citizen of
Tanzania and had never been one even though he had served as the country's
minister of home affairs, minister of defence, and minister of foreign affairs,
and even led the struggle for independence with Nyerere in the 1950s.
Yet nothing was said in all those
years that he was not a citizen of Tanganyika. It was only decades later, in
the 1990s, that the government said he was not a Tanzanian
but a Malawian.
Others said he was a Mozambican.
The government even withdrew his
passport on the same grounds that he was not a Tanzanian citizen. He could not
even travel outside the country after his passport was withdrawn.
The vilification campaign against
him by the Tanzanian government made the government look bad and it finally
relented and gave the passport back to him.
Kambona himself had his own
"revelations" concerning the national identities of other Tanzanian
leaders including President Nyerere himself. He said Nyerere's father was a
Tutsi from Rwanda who was a porter for the Germans and settled in Tanganyika
and that he could prove it.
He also said Vice President Rashid
Kawawa came from Mozambique, and John Malecela - who once served as Tanzania's
foreign affairs minister, prime minister and vice president among other posts
at different times - came from Congo where his grandparents were captured as
slaves before they settled in Dodoma, central Tanzania.
But few people took any of those
claims seriously any more than they did the claim that Kambona himself was not
a Tanzanian citizen but a Malawian, from Likoma Island, or a Mozambican.
When Kambona returned to Tanzania,
he also promised that he would tell the public how much money President Nyerere
and Vice President Kawawa had stolen through the years and where they hid it.
Many people were anxious to hear
that. But when he addressed a mass rally in Dar es Salaam, he had nothing to
say about the money he claimed President Nyerere and Vice president Kawawa
stole. And many people were disappointed. It also cost him credibility among
many people who believed that he simply did not tell the truth and had nothing
to say about Nyerere and Kawawa with regard to their
"misappropriation" of public funds.
End
of his life
Kambona was indeed a luminary in
Tanzanian politics. But he was no longer the star he once was, when he was second
only to Nyerere in influence and popularity in the sixties when many people
even copied his hair style, which came to be known as "Kambona
style."
He died in London in July 1997,
almost exactly 30 years after he first went into exile in Britain in July 1967
where he lived for 25 years before returning to his home country in 1992 to
spend the last few years of his life.
Despite his political misfortunes,
Oscar Kambona will always be remembered as one of the most prominent leaders of
Tanzania who also played a leading role in the struggle for independence and
who relentlessly campaigned for the adoption of multiparty democracy in
Tanzania. But he will also always be remembered as the most prominent Tanzanian
leader who tried to overthrow President Julius Nyerere.
It is, of course, anybody's guess
how he would have been, as a leader, had he become president of Tanzania. Even
his most bitter opponents can not prove he would have been a bad leader. He
could have been one of the best presidents Tanzania ever had. We will never
know. Or to put it another way, Oscar Kambona was one of the best presidents
Tanzania never had.
And it is very much possible that
under his leadership, Tanzania's economy would probably not have suffered as
much as it did under Nyerere during his years of socialist rule. Socialism
ruined Tanzania's economy and Kambona was opposed to socialism right from the
beginning, although many Tanzanians believed that Nyerere meant well but
pursued the wrong policies.
Even Kambona himself probably believed
that Nyerere meant well but pursued the wrong policies and that the country
would have done better had Nyerere and his colleagues been willing to listen to
those who had different views on how the country should be run.
Today, Tanzania is pursuing free-market
policies after renouncing socialism, and has adopted multiparty democracy, the
same policies and kind of political system Kambona had advocated all along.
Vyanzo vya habari hii:
- Godfrey Mwakikagile, chapter 13, "Coup Attempts Against President Julius Nyerere and Reflections on Coup Leader Oscar Kambona by Andrew Nyerere," in his book Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era, 2nd Edition (Las Vegas, Nevada: Protea Publishing Co., 2005), pp. 359 – 377.
The book covers extensively the 1970
treason trial in which Oscar Kambona was implicated as the ring leader. The
trial was open to the public.
The author has also addressed the
army mutiny of 1964 in Tanganyika among many other subjects.
- Jacqueline Audrey Kalley, Southern African Political History: A Chronology of Key Political Events from Independence to Mid-1997 (Greenwood Press, 1999), p. 594, where she says President Julius Nyerere challenged Oscar Kambona to return to Tanzania and testify before a judicial commission that he had not deposited large sums of money in his account.
- "Bibi Titi and the Treason Trial of 1970," in The East African, Nairobi, Kenya, 10–16 November 1999.
- Adam Seftel and Annie Smyth, editors, Tanzania: The Story of Julius Nyerere, Mkuki na Nyota Publishers, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Fountain Publishers, Kampala, Uganda.
- Kambona Foundation, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Kambona and Nyerere remained
political enemies until the end of their lives. When Kambona died in July 1997,
Nyerere did not even attend his funeral. But his son Andrew Nyerere did, as he
stated in his correspondence with Godfrey Mwakikagile, quoted in Mwakikagile's
book, Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era. See Andrew Nyerere's letter in
chapter 13 of the book, p. 365.
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