| |
Back to Index
Robert
Mugabe critic 'raped'
Sebastien
Berger, Daily Telegraph (UK)
July 09, 2007
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/07/09/wzim109.xml
In Robert Mugabe's
Zimbabwe terror is so endemic that not even the daughter of a former
prime minister known as a supporter of black rights is immune from
rape. Judith Todd's father Sir Garfield Todd was Rhodesia's last
liberal leader and she was imprisoned, force-fed and exiled under
Ian Smith's rule for her efforts to promote black majority rule.
After independence she returned to head a development agency working
particularly with the war veterans who had fought for Zimbabwe.
But when she criticised Mr Mugabe's regime she was detained and
raped by a senior army officer, she revealed yesterday. It was,
she said - both for her and her attacker - an example of the culture
of fear used to preserve Mr Mugabe's rule. The assault came a day
after she told the then army commander and another senior officer
that the North Korean-trained 5 Brigade was massacring civilians
in a campaign of atrocities in Matabeleland. The next morning another
senior officer picked her up in a car and drove to a house she believed
was in the Chikurubi prison complex. "A servant let us in,
not looking at us," she wrote in a newly-published memoir,
Through the Darkness: A life in Zimbabwe, in which she names the
man. "The [senior officer] led me into a bedroom, opened a
bottle of beer for each of us, unstrapped his firearm in its holster,
laid it on the bedside table next to my head and proceeded. I did
not resist." In her first interview on the subject, she told
The Daily Telegraph: "It was rape. I was in a state of complete
terror. Now and again you have to face destiny. I had just been
reading these documents which were full of rape, terror, mass murder.
I knew something was going to happen when that car came. What happened
was actually a relief because I thought I was going to be killed.
At least I was alive."
A quietly spoken woman
now in her sixties and living in Cape Town, she bears no animosity
towards her attacker, no desire for vengeance. Instead, having stayed
in Zimbabwe for many years afterwards, even after being stripped
of her citizenship in 2003, she sees him as a victim in the same
way she was. "I have no reason to believe he wanted to do what
he did, quite the opposite. It's so complex because he was obviously
so troubled and so unhappy. I just regard him as a fellow victim
. . . maybe someone was watching him. That's what has happened
to so many people in Zimbabwe." Mr Mugabe, who was once a teacher
in the Dadaya network of rural schools set up by her parents, has
entrenched himself in power through both money and fear, she said.
Although 24 years ago, the rape was typical, she added, citing an
incident earlier this year when police beat up lawyers who were
protesting outside the high court in Harare. The officers had been
ordered to assault the group, she was told. "They knew there
were people watching them and that if they didn't beat them properly
they themselves would be beaten," she said. That's Zimbabwe
now. Zanu PF is the instrument of evil in Zimbabwe. For the future
wellbeing of Zimbabwe Zanu PF must be eliminated. We need to be
cleansed." Ms Todd's alleged attacker went on to have a distinguished
diplomatic career. He could not be reached for comment yesterday,
and calls to Zimbabwe government spokesmen went unanswered.
Judith Todd has signed
a declaration waiving her right to anonymity as a rape victim for
this interview.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|