Contents: Preface • INTRODUCTION by Liberation Support Movement • Internal Settlement and Anglo-American Plan • We Are Preparing to Run a Country, Interview with Joshua Nkomo, ZAPU • The Patriotic Front in a Creation of Zimbabwe, Interview with Robert Mugabe, ZANU • You Either Support the Patriotic Front Or You Support the Enemy, Interview with Eddison Zvobgo, ZANU • In ZANU's Liberated Areas: Tradition is Still Strong by Eddison Zvobgo • Why Is the West Worried? by Joshua Nkomo • Action and Information • Voices of the Liberation Movement... • Also Available from LSM Press • The interview with Mugabe is excerpted from two interviews by the Mozambique weekly Tempo. The...
Contents: Preface • INTRODUCTION by Liberation Support Movement • Internal Settlement and Anglo-American Plan • We Are Preparing to Run a Country, Interview with Joshua Nkomo, ZAPU • The Patriotic Front in a Creation of Zimbabwe, Interview with Robert Mugabe, ZANU • You Either Support the Patriotic Front Or You Support the Enemy, Interview with Eddison Zvobgo, ZANU • In ZANU's Liberated Areas: Tradition is Still Strong by Eddison Zvobgo • Why Is the West Worried? by Joshua Nkomo • Action and Information • Voices of the Liberation Movement... • Also Available from LSM Press • The interview with Mugabe is excerpted from two interviews by the Mozambique weekly Tempo. The pamphlet includes excerpts from a speech by Joshua Nkomo to the annual Southern Africa Research Association, Washington, D.C. on June 17, 1978. The pamphlet mentions ZAPU (Zimbabwe African People's Union), ZANU (Zimbabwe African National Union), the Land Apportionment Act, the National Land Husbandry Act, the settler government, the Preventive Detention Act, the Law and Order Maintenance Act, the Emergency Powers Act, Ndabaningi Sithole, Shona, Ndebele, African reformists, parliamentary democracy, missionaries, the colonial system, strikes, demonstrations, majority rule, the British, guerrilla actions, Bishop Abel Muzorewa, Jeremiah Chirau, Ian Smith, the UN-imposed economic boycott of Rhodesia, Western governments, corporations, neocolonialism, independence, the National Assembly, the Zimbabwe Development Fund, the declaration of rights, the judiciary, public service, the police force, the defense forces, the prison service, transitional government, pensions, political prisoners, discrimination, democratic elections, a new constitution, the Executive Council, the Rhodesian Parliament, ZIPA (Zimbabwe People's Army), Herbert Chitepo, Jason Moyo, Maputo, a so-called "All-Party Conference," the Salisbury regime, attacks on Mozambique and Zambia, the People's Translation Service, victories in the liberated zones, Umtali, Que Que, Frelimo, Tete province, armed struggle, the Soviet Union, Cuba, an "anti-communist" campaign, non-violent struggle, socialist countries, the OAU (Organization of African Unity), Andrew Young, President Carter, Zbigniew Brzezinski, a joint military command, Eastern Europe, political education, the Fort Victoria area, Harold Wilson, an Aeroflot plane, Pan American, TWA, NATO, President Neto, the MPLA, Western European countries, mercenaries, the Third World, human rights, and Secretary of State Vance, Dr. Owen.