On January 12, 1964 John Okello Lead Zanzibar revolution
Do you know who was the mastermind of the Zanzibar Revolution of January 1964?
MOST
Tanzanians especially of the present generation do not know exactly the
history of the revolution of Zanzibar which took place over four
decades ago. They don’t even know how it started and how the
Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar was formed. This is because after
the revolution, the government has not been speaking the truth of the
matter and instead it has been hiding the truth to the eyes of many
Tanzanians. Most of them can tell the First President of Zanzibar the
late Sheikh Aman Karume who is regularly mentioned to have taken an
active part of the liberation of the people of Zanzibar. But the history
tells us that, “President Karume was called to assume the position of
presidency after the revolution which was organized and planned by a
self-styled Field Marshal John Okello, a Ugandan born national who
dedicated his life to save Zanzibaris in those days. He worked
effectively by other freedom fighters who were members of Afro-Shirazi
party. By then Karume was living in Tanganyika mainland for fear of his
life after he quarreled with the Sultanate government and the ruling
party of the Zanzibar government, the ZNP which was led by Prime
Minister, Mohammed Shamte.
Despite of this important historic event which brought freedom to the
majority of the African population residing in both Pemba and Unguja
islands, heroes who took active part in this revolution seems to have
been forgotten in one way or another and are never mentioned at all
whenever the nation celebrates the occasion in commemoration to mark
this day in the country.
On April 7th each year, the government of Tanzania marks the
anniversary of the death of the first President of Zanzibar and first
Vice-President of the United Republic of Tanzania Sheikh Abeid Aman
Karume with nostalgic feelings of the man who devoted and sacrificed his
life for the liberation of the people of Zanzibar. Just who is this man
claimed to have helped change Zanzibar’s course of history and
contributed to the birth of the Union between Tanganyika and Zanzibar to
form the United Republic of Tanzania? The persistent narration of the
history of Zanzibar and the revolutionary movement seems to have been
driven in a wrong way from its inception, let the government stick to
the truth. Zanzibar is an autonomous state which before its union with
the then Tanganyika on 26th April 1964 three months after the
revolution, attained its legal independence from British rule in
October 1963. Within few months later, a nine hour revolution took place
that led to the expulsion of the Sultanate government. Field Marshal
John Okello is taken as an instrumental figure behind the move who by
all means should always be remembered during national celebrations for
his courageousness and the effort he showed as a leader of the
revolution. It’s also disturbing to note that, the government seems to
have turned a blind eye in support of his movements and campaigns which
he made and eventually led to the overthrow of the Omani-Sultanate
government on the Island on January 12th 1964. This
significant occasion ended centuries of the oppressive Arab sultanate
oligarchy in Zanzibar. As concerns his background history ‘Okello’ was a Ugandan national from Lira district occupied by Lango ethnic group. He first entered the island of Pemba from Kenya on 21st June
1959 in search of a job just like other people seeking for life in a
foreign country. Soon after his short stay he joined the Afro-Shiraz
Party, the only party which by then had its majority members composed of
black Africans. Because of his patriotic outlook, he was elected the
secretary of the youth wing for Vitongozi area and later came to be a
youth wing leader of the whole Pemba island.
Field Marshal John Okello (seated at the centre) with his commanders in a group photo immediately after the revolution.
He began his campaigns by fighting for the rights of Africans and during
his speeches which were loved by everyone, he had established a vision
that revolution was a solution to freedom though he realized the
difficulties but was confident they could be overcome by intelligence
and properly organized local military application. He gave much thought
to the political problems of the black Africans residing in Zanzibar and
felt strongly for the liberation of the blacks who were subjected with
every kind of humiliation under the yoke of minority Arab rule.
In early 1963, Okello began to organize the local troops to fight
against the colonialists in a bid to bring human dignity which was lost
among the majority of the African group residing in both islands. To
make his planned mission work, he organized with mainland African
policemen in both Pemba and Unguja islands and persuaded them one by one
of the correctness of his views. Like many other African Diasporas in
Zanzibar, Okello also navigated with the ASP aspirants that appeared to
be under Sheik Abeid Karume. The real history about the revolution
itself tells us that Mr. Karume wasn’t even aware of the coup despite of
the government which keeps on applauding him to have taken active part
in overthrowing the Sultanate government. When he became President of
Zanzibar, few months after the revolution, he expelled Mr. Okello from
the island for unknown reasons. This matter has been remained concealed
to the eyes of many Tanzanians and none of them actually knows nothing
the basic reasons which led to his deportation from Zanzibar.
Sheikh Karume was born in Mwera village, a short distance from Zanzibar
town in 1905. His death occurred mysteriously. On April 7, 1972, when a
gang of counter-revolutionaries sneaked into the headquarters of the
then Zanzibar ruling Afro-Shirazi Party (ASP) at Kisiwandui in Unguja
Urban District. One of them immediately opened fire on a group of top
party leaders who were enjoying a game of 'Bao'. Moments later, the body
of the ASP President, who was also the President of Zanzibar and Union
First Vice-President, laid in a pool of blood, dead. The shooter was
immediately shot by President’s security men around.
Heroes’ movements during uprising:
In January 1964 the Sultanate government was overthrown by an internal revolution. Although
the revolution was carried out by only about 600 armed men under the
leadership of the communist-trained “Field Marshal” John Okello, it won a
considerable support from the African population. Thousands of Arabs
were massacred in riots, and thousands more fled the island. According to the book entitled “Revolution in Zanzibar” that the commander and self-styled Field Marshall John Okello wrote, the people killed during the invasion were about 13,000.
With the popular support from the island's oppressed
native African majority, Okello and his men fought their way to the
capital of Zanzibar, Stone Town, where the sultan Sayyid Jamshid Ibn Abdullah lived.
Even though they were poorly armed, Okello and his men whom he
appointed as Brigadier commandars in-charge during the mutiny surprised
the majority of the people in the world and took power of the
government.
During a speech when he was introducing himself on the radio monitored in a Kenyan Swahili accent, Okello dubbed himself the "Field Marshal of Zanzibar and Pemba". He
gave the sultan an order to kill his family and to kill himself
afterwards, otherwise, he (Okello) would do so himself. However, the
sultan had already brought himself to safety later to be harboured in
Britain. The prime minister Mr. Mohammed Shamte and other ministers also
managed to escape.
Having taken control of both islands which by then had a
population of 300,000 people, Okello created a Revolutionary Council
and invited Sheik Abeid Karume back to the island to assume the title of
Presidency. Other Zanzibaris in foreign territorry were also invited
back, most notably the marxist politician the late Abdulrahman Babu to
assume the position of a Prime Minister. Both Karume and Babu had not
been informed of the coup as they were residing in Tanganyika for fear
of their safety following the quarell they had with the Sultanante
government, but returned to Zanzibar, where they were welcomed by
Okello. However, neither Karume nor Babu wanted anything to do with him.
John Okello reserved for himself the title of "Field Marshal", a
position with undefined power. What followed was a three month long
internal struggle for power.
On his arrival in Zanzibar on a Tanganyikan government
plane, Karume was taken to the broadcasting station and Okello
introduced him as President of the people’s Republic of Zanzibar. After a
brief introduction to the general public, Mr Karume addressed the
nation by saying,
“I am pleased and delighted to have this
opportunity of speaking to you publicly in our newly freed island. As
President of the Republic, I promise to serve you faithfully and to the
full extent of your needs. The government we are going to construct will
be the opposite of that which we have suffered under before. I am glad
to say that under the wise leadership of Field Marshal John Okello we
have reached a goal which we alone could not achieve. I appeal to you
all to serve the new regime faithfully and honestly. I must express my
thanks” Karume went on, “to the freedom fighters through whose efforts I
have become President, and to Field Marshal Okello, whose fruitful
leadership was accepted by you. My being President now, is due entirely
to your strength and energy, you have struggled and suffered and died,
but you have achieved a remarkable victory. I want all of us to work in
unity and to obey Field Marshal Okello as any other person born on this
Island without any form of discrimnation. Without his wisdom and
courage, none of us would be where we are at the present. Fiel Marshal
Okello’s activities clearly shows that he is a man born with African
liberation in his heart, and we of this Island are actually to have had
him achieve our freedom so quickly”. THAT WAS END OF HIS SPEECH.
Within a month of his rule after being announced as
President of Zanzibar, Karume used his political skills to align the
leaders of neighboring African countries against Okello, and invited
Tanganyikan police officers into Zanzibar to maintain order.
As soon as Okello took a trip out of the country, Karume
declared him an enemy of the state and did not allow him to return back
in Zanzibar, he was also deported from Tanganyika. Given the presence
of Tanganyikan police and the absence of their leader, Okello's gangs of
followers did not offer any resistance. Okello then stayed in Kenya, in
Congo-Kinshasa and in Uganda. He was incarcerated multiple times and
was last seen with the former Ugandan President, dictator Iddi Amin in
1971 and vanished afterwards. It is more or less assumed that Idi Amin
saw him as a threat (after Amin promoted himself, Okello reportedly
joked that "now Uganda has two field marshals") and had arranged his
assassination. This remains speculative, however.
Karume's second stroke of political genius came when he
agreed to form a union with Tanganyikan president Julius Nyerere in
April 1964. The union which was agreed by these two leaders ensured that
the new country, to be called Tanzania would not align itself with the
Soviet Union and communist bloc, as Abdulrahman Babu had advocated.
Karume's government marginalized Babu to the point of irrelevance. The
Marxist leader was eventually forced to flee Tanzania after being
charged with masterminding the assassination of Karume on 7th April
1972. During his reign as a President before his death, Karume was
often criticized for the atrocities that were carried out against
Zanzibari Arabs and Asians after the revolution, and later against
anyone he suspected of endangering his position. It is hard to ascertain
the role Karume played personally, but the numbers are bleak. The
American diplomat to Zanzibar, Mr. Donald Petterson, estimated that “by the end of summer of 1965, Zanzibar's pre-revolution Arab population of 50,000 had been halved".
Why Tanzania is hiding the truth about Zanzibar Revolution, and deported a foreign hero who participated in this revolt?
Tracing back from the reality why Tanzania is hiding the truth about the
Zanzibar Revolution, one might say it’s because of political reasons
which were planned in favour of the few indigenous groups of people who
wanted to disrupt a chain of power whose prospects had been foreseen
would become intolerable in the eyes of the majority. But Field marshal
John Okello had revealed this in his book entitled Revolution in
Zanzibar which he wrote few months after the revolution. The publication
and sale of the book was banned by the government few months later
after its release. According to him, he had realized there was a close
relationship between Karume and President Nyerere. They had some kind of
plan, but there was nothing he could do about it. With the same
anticipation that had allowed him to know in advance many things that
would happen to him. He also knew that he would suffer from the hands of
Africans although he had done good to them. But it was not his
intention to harm anyone without a good cause and he preferred to leave
his new opponents to carry out their wishes as it might please them
In the book Okello is quoted as saying that, “ I understand
African thinking and I understand that what I did in Zanzibar, had it
been done in any other country for the sake of Africans, I would still
have been judged wrong and borne blame. But I acted alone during the
revolution and had to remain alone afterwards. If anyone can claim he
was with me during the planning and thinking through of the Revolution,
let him come forward and explain it” Okello then went on by saying that “
Only God almighty knows what went on in Zanzibar. If anyone claims to
have trained me or taught me to act as I did, let him come forward and
describe it. I had been an ordinary worker in Zanzibar and went
originally to work. A man of class and limited education certainly could
not have gone abroad easily and why should I have known by or been
acceptable to, and nothing proves this more than the wild claims made
about me after the revolution and yet no one knew anything about me at
all. I was reported to be a Luo man from Kenya and a former member of
Zanzibar police, yet a check of records in Zanzibar would not reveal my
name on any police employment rolls, other people claimed they had seen
me in Cuba and in Cairo and in some socialist countries. But there has
been any evidence to refute any claims that I have never been outside
East Africa to assert that I was an agent of some power, is foolish. How
would anyone known I could manage revolution? And why did no one know
me after the revolution?
God alone knows and still knows what is happening with me. He is
my teacher and whatever he taught me about revolutionary activities is
within me and no one on earth can discern it. My power in regard to the
revolution was as a messenger of God, and God alone helped to master and
eradicate the imperialists on the Island.
On 24th January 1964, Okello received an unsigned written letter in Swahili as quoted in his book as follows:- “Field
Marshal John Okello, your behaviors is inconsistent with the
requirement of the indigenous people. You are the only person boasting
of having the power in the revolutionary government. You must realize
that, you do not belong to the Muslim religion and you are leading
Muslims even though you are a Christian. Also your activities led to the
death of many people in the Island most of whom are Muslims. So start
counting your days for a time will come when Muslims will unite to expel
you from the Island” The letter did not upset him as he suspected to have come from ZNP Arabs. On 8th February 1964, he received another letter stating “Field
Marshal John Okello we are telling you that, you will not last for ever
on this Island. You will soon find yourself outside and unable to
return. Remember Karume himself is a Muslim and you may be certain he
loved the Arabs killed during the Revolution more than he loves you”.
Okello and Karume brought on the table of discussion:
Within two months’ time after the revolution, Field Marshal Okello and
President Karume flew in a three seater airplane to Dar es Salaam from
Zanzibar whereby they were oddly met by President Nyerere. The two held a
strong meeting chaired by Nyerere, others who were present was the
Prime Minister Rashid Mfaume Kawawa and TANU secretary General and
Minister for External Affairs, Mr. Oscar Kambona. According to quotes in
Okello’s book, the meeting was opened by President Nyerere who began by
saying that John Okello “I understand there have been
misunderstanding between you and President Karume in the Island and we
are here to make some arrangement with you. I would like to know whether
the present government belongs to you or Karume? I replied “The
government of Zanzibar is neither mine nor Karume’s but it is the
government of the people of Zanzibar. When we fought we promised the
people they would get their own government. We actually fought for
freedom and that is what the people now have. We are the provisional
leaders but there will be leaders tomorrow. We work for the people and
they control us. Even here you are called President and head of the
government of Tanganyika, but you know that the government is not yours,
but rather it’s the government of the people including yourself.
President Nyerere went on to ask me what I thought of Karume and why I
used the broadcasting station to make fierce and boastful speeches more
than was necessary. “I respect President Karume highly” I said, “First
as an elder, second as my President, thirdly as a personal friend, and
fourthly as a brother”. I went on, “you know very well that our
government was snatched by force and not by election as such, the radio
is the easiest available means to communicate with the people and indeed
to inform the world at large of the decisions of the revolutionary
government. The quickest way to inform the people of what their new
government is doing is to use radio”. President Nyerere then turned to
Karume and asked, “Do you understand what Okello has been saying? Karume
replied, Yes I understand it clearly, I too, like Okello and I can
trust him, but I do not understand why he dislikes my association with
Abdrahaman Babu. And yet when Babu was expelled, it’s I who introduced
him to other East African leaders, and after the revolution it was Mr.
Okello himself who called him back and gave him a ministerial portfolio”
President Nyerere said he was satisfied with what I had said at the
meeting, but he was concerned with some of my radio speeches.
“I realized after this meeting, that a serious fight for power was going
on and someone wanted to emerge on top. It looked to me as if President
Nyerere felt that as long as I was on the Island, he could not join it
with Tanganyika, he feared I would want to join with Kenya. Indeed I was
very much in agreement with a Kenyan President Kenyatta’s plans and
ideas. Kenyatta was straightforward and spoke openly. If I joined
Zanzibar with any single East African nation, I would have preferred
Kenya to Tanganyika” Okello remarked in his book.
Dispossessed but not defeated:
Other quotes from Okello’s book can be read as follows:- I have had
several lessons, then in African psychology and I believe that a good
thing done by an African for his brothers in need may in future be
turned against him. Yet there are few people on earth who will help
others at their own risk. It is wrong that when you have cultivated a
farm for your brothers and the fruits are ready, they deny you a share.
God himself must have cursed such behaviors It is also unwise to say a
pot which helped you to cook should be broken to pieces when you have
eaten from it and are satisfied, for you do not know what may happen the
next day, and if you are hungry a pot broken in contentment will not
serve you in the need. The old fishermen with whom I spoke when crossing
from Pemba to Unguja in 1963 and many of my soldiers and officers, will
recall my predictions about their behavious towards me. I did as I said
I would lead them to freedom and they did as I said they would expel me
from their land like tailless dog. As a child, I was dispossessed of
everything, yet this did not defeat me, as a leader of the
Zanzibar Revolution.
according to Emmanuel Onyango.
http://eonyango.blogspot.com/2008/05/do-you-know-who-was-mastermind-of.html
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