Morgan Tsvangirai

Former

Birthday March 10, 1952

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Gutu, Southern Rhodesia

DEATH DATE 2018-2-14, Johannesburg, South Africa (65 years old)

Nationality Zimbabwe

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1952

Morgan Richard Tsvangirai (10 March 1952 – 14 February 2018) was a Zimbabwean politician who was Prime Minister of Zimbabwe from 2009 to 2013.

He was president of the Movement for Democratic Change, and later the Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai (MDC–T), and a key figure in the opposition to former president Robert Mugabe.

1972

After leaving school with 8 Ordinary levels, in April 1972 he landed his first job as a trainee weaver for Elastics & Tapes textile factory in Mutare.

1974

In 1974 an old school mate from Silveira encouraged Morgan to apply for an advertised job as an apprentice for Anglo America's Bindura's Nickel Mine in Mashonaland Central.

He spent ten years at the mine, rising from plant operator to plant supervisor.

His rural home was Buhera, which is 220 km south east of Harare.

1978

Tsvangirai married his first wife, Susan, in 1978.

1980

Upon Zimbabwean independence in 1980, Tsvangirai, who was then aged 28, joined the ascendent ZANU–PF party, led by Robert Mugabe, who would later become his biggest political rival.

Tsvangirai is reported to have been an ardent Mugabe supporter and to have risen "swiftly in the hierarchy", eventually becoming one of the party's senior officials.

He is also known for his role in the Zimbabwean trade union movement, where he held the position of branch chairman of the Associated Mine Workers' Union and was later elected into the executive of the National Mine Workers' Union.

1989

In 1989 he became the Secretary-General of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, the umbrella trade union organisation of Zimbabwe.

Tsvangirai led the ZCTU away from the ruling ZANU-PF.

As his power and that of the movement grew, his relationship with the government deteriorated.

Three years after coming to power, Robert Mugabe ordered the 5th Brigade, a military unit specially trained by North Korea, to commit a massacre in Matabeleland in co-operation with the Minister of Defence Enos Nkala, led by Air Marshal Perrance Shiri because of suspicion of an alleged counter-revolution being planned by Joshua Nkomo.

Tsvangirai would later use Gukurahundi against ZANU and to drum up support in Matabeleland.

Tsvangirai has periodically toured the mass graves of the victims in Tsholotsho, Kezi, Lupane, Nkayi and other places in rural Matabeleland.

1997

The National Constitutional Assembly (NCA), established in 1997, was chaired by a Moderator, and its day-to-day executive was run by a Task Force.

Tsvangirai chaired the Task Force, as founding convener Tawanda Mutasah (succeeded by Bishop Nemapare) served as Moderator.

Serving with Tsvangirai in the Task Force were activists that included Lovemore Madhuku, Welshman Ncube, Everjoice Win, Brian Kagoro, Tendai Biti and Priscilla Misihairabwi.

The NCA gathered individual Zimbabwean citizens and civic organisations including labour movements, student and youth groups, women's groups, churches, business groups and human rights organisations.

2001

Addressing villagers in Maphisa in 2001, he said:

"This was a barbaric operation by ZANU-PF. It should never have happened. It was a sad episode in our history and the MDC will obviously want to see justice being done if it comes to power. Such human rights abuses should be revisited and those responsible will have to account for their actions."

2002

Tsvangirai was the MDC candidate in the controversial 2002 Zimbawean presidential election, losing to Mugabe.

2008

He later contested the first round of the 2008 Zimbawean presidential election as the MDC-T candidate, taking 47.8% of the vote according to official results, placing him ahead of Mugabe, who received 43.2%.

Tsvangirai claimed to have won a majority and said that the results could have been altered in the month between the election and the reporting of official results.

Tsvangirai initially planned to run in the second round against Mugabe, but withdrew shortly before it was held, arguing that the election would not be free and fair due to widespread violence and intimidation by government supporters that led to the deaths of 200 people.

2009

Tsvangirai sustained non-life-threatening injuries in a car crash on 6 March 2009 when heading towards his rural home in Buhera.

His first wife, Susan Tsvangirai, was killed in the head-on collision.

The couple had six children during their 31-year marriage, which ended with her death in the 2009 car crash.

2011

In 2011 Locardia Karimatsenga (born 1970) claimed that Tsvangirai married her in a customary ceremony in 2010.

She had been seeking maintenance payments of £10,000 a month to keep up the lifestyle to which, she said in court papers, she had become accustomed.

A year later, his love life made headlines again after a 23-year-old woman bore him a child and he refused to support the baby until she threatened to take him to court.

2012

He married his second wife, Elizabeth Macheka (born 1976) mother of three, on 15 September 2012.

2017

As the 2017 Zimbabwean coup d'état occurred, Tsvangirai asked Mugabe to step down.

He hoped that an all-inclusive stakeholders' meeting to chart the country's future and an internationally supervised process for the forthcoming elections would create a process that would take the country towards a legitimate regime.

2018

On 14 February 2018, Tsvangirai died at the age of 65 after reportedly suffering from colorectal cancer.

Tsvangirai was born in the Buhera area, in then Southern Rhodesia, to Karanga Shona parentage through his father Dzingirai-Chibwe Tsvangirai and mother Lydia Tsvangirai (née Zvaipa).

He was the eldest of nine children, and the son of a communal farmer, mine worker, carpenter and bricklayer.

He completed his primary education at St. Marks Goneso Primary School Hwedza, and was transferred by his father to Chikara Primary School Gutu, then to Silveira.

He completed his secondary education at Gokomere High School.