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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Of the fist
John
Eppel
July 22, 2008
"Let's go,"
growled Comrade Hondo shouldering his battered AK 47 and smashing
his beer bottle against the wall of Mr Mutarara's store. Hondo
was a genuine war veteran, now in his fifties. He was wearing a
police uniform and had been given a temporary force number, and
a temporary designation: Chief Warden. With him were seven youths
designated by Joint Operations Command as Militias, and two brutalised
farm workers. Their task that night, early morning if the glow on
the eastern horizon was anything to go by, was to put into effect
Operation Vote Wisely. They were armed with iron bars, the kind
used to reinforce concrete. They were drunk.
Mr Mutarara's General
Trading Store had been bought by his father in 1953, the year of
the Centenary. It still displayed, somewhat anachronistically, faded
advertisements for Aspro, Milk of Magnesia, and Rudge Cycles. It
was a solidly built brick under corrugated iron structure and, except
for a period during the Liberation Struggle when it had been regularly
plundered by both sides in that bloody civil war, it had supplied
the surrounding rural community, at a reasonable profit, with everything
from mealie meal to wire nails.
No longer. When comrade
Hondo and his group petrol bombed the store (the Mutarara family
had already gone into hiding) they found nothing but three plastic
coat hangers and two almost full crates of Castle lager. They had
also been passing round a powerful distillation called, onomatopoeically,
"tot- tot" accompanied by deep inhalations of the finest
Gokwe mbanje, so by the time they left the fire-blackened shop they
felt ready for anything.
"Anything"
materialized into a seventy year old MDC activist called Mai Mwatse
and her fourteen year old grand daughter, Chido. Their village,
what was left of it, was located north of Harare in the Mazoe district,
once famous for its oranges, still famous, somehow, for its orange
juice. This was to be a mopping up operation; the real work had
been done the night before. It had begun with an address by the
MP elect for this constituency, retired Colonel Moscow Mhondi. In
the middle of the night, villagers had been dragged from their huts
and forced to assemble in the bush. The MP elect had harangued them
for nearly three hours. The gist of his speech: if the country is
given away through the ballot, we will go back to the bush and start
another war. Then the villagers were forced to chant ZANU PF slogans
and sing Chimurenga songs. For hours. Then the beatings began. Then
the killings. Limbs were broken, and backs (by laying the victims
on a log, supine, see-saw style, and jumping on them); finally their
heads were crushed. The MP elect broke many jaws with the butt of
his rifle, and he presided over the killings, which were witnessed
by the entire village including wives and children of the men who
were killed.
The militias, also known
as green bombers, wore T-shirts, combat jackets and trousers, and
black boots. Their T-shirts portrayed the Esteemed Leader flapping
his wrist at God, and the slogan: tiri vechibhakera (we are of the
fist). The two brutalised farm workers wore rags. They were from
retired Colonel Mhondi's farm. Douglas, the younger of the
two, had been born on the farm, at the little clinic, which had
been established by the previous owners, the Longbottoms. He had
been schooled on the farm, and was in Grade Six when angry war veterans
arrived in government vehicles without number plates and drove out
the white owners and their labourers. Among those who ended up camping
along roadsides, for months to come, were Douglas and his extended
family.
One of those angry war
veterans had been Comrade Hondo. Douglas remembered his demented
eyes, red with battle-lust, as he set about killing the Longbottoms'
pets. When the old, spayed Labrador bitch dared to challenge him,
he grabbed it by the tail and swung it round several times before
smashing its head against a wall of the farm house. The guinea pig
and the budgie were easy. Only the cat got away.
Some of the children
of the evicted labourers were allowed back to the farm where they
underwent extensive re-education, which focussed on words like "revolution",
"sovereignty", "colonialism", "imperialism",
"racism"; and phrases like "puppet sanctions-mongers"
and "Blair's kith and kin". Douglas had been one
of these children, grateful for a daily plate of sadza and relish,
which the farm no longer produced but which was freely available
from Care International and other well-meaning suckers. When the
harmonised elections of 11 March, 2008 went the wrong way, all retired
Colonel Mhondi's farm workers (no longer labourers) were mobilised
to help punish, with impunity, the misguided villagers throughout
the country, but particularly in the previously ZANU PF strongholds,
the three Mashonaland provinces.
Mai Mwatse and Chido
had missed the previous night's pungwe because they had been
in Harare to help care for the hundreds of displaced villagers who
had taken refuge at Harvest House, the opposition headquarters.
Mai Mwatse was a polling agent for her constituency and was, consequently,
a marked person. When they got home the following day they were
devasted to see that every single hut in the village, including
their own, had been burned to the ground. The police had been and
gone. Their task was to remove the bodies to the nearest mortuary,
and those still alive but incapable of moving, to the nearest government
hospital or clinic. They had strict instructions from the men at
the top: Joint Operations Command: not to interfere with things
political.
The traumatized community
were huddled round an open fire - the nights were becoming chilly
- when Comrade Hondo's party arrived. While his team stood
guard on the outskirts of the circle of villagers, the war veteran
went up to Mai Mwatse and ordered her to lie face down on the ground.
"This is what we do to sell-outs," he growled, and he
began beating her with an iron bar. Her screams excited the militia
and one of the farm workers, and they joined in with the beating,
all the while chanting: "Zimbabwe will never be a colony again!"
Only Douglas, head lowered in shame, remained on the periphery.
Chido tried to protect
her grandmother by throwing herself over the old woman's head.
With a hobnailed boot Comrade Hondo nudged her onto her back and
signalled to his mujibas to take her. The petrified crowd looked
on. The farm worker was given the task of holding the girl down,
by the shoulders; the dominant youth handed his iron bar to one
of his subordinates, unbuckled his belt, and pulled his trousers
down. Comrade Hondo wrenched Mai Mwatse's head in Chido's
direction and forcefully held it there. Chido was sobbing, begging
them to leave her alone. Two of the youths ripped off her underpants
and pushed her dress above her navel. They forced her legs open
and the dominant one went down on her. He humped her for so long
that his comrades became impatient, called upon him to "release",
"discharge", "unload". Finally the spasm
came and he rolled off the whimpering child. The next one went down
on her, and the next, and the next.... By the time the farm labourer
took his turn, Chido was unconscious.
"This one is mine!"
growled Comrade Hondo. He handed his iron bar to one of the militias,
slipped his rifle off his shoulder, and barked an order to turn
Mai Mwatse on her back. She was too broken from her beating to resist.
"Hold open her legs! Whore of the white man! I am going to
fuck your brains out!"
She gave a strangled
cry as he rammed the barrel of his AK 47 into her vagina. "Do
you know why this gun is called 47?" shouted Comrade Hondo.
"Because it pumps 47 times before it comes. Count! COUNT!"
He screamed at the audience, and they began to count. "Louder!"
Forty Seven times he pushed the barrel in and out of the old woman's
bloodied vagina. Then... "Let's come!" he laughed,
and he fired three times into the woman's body.
On their way back to
retired Colonel Mhondi's farm, which was being used as a torture
centre, they mocked Douglas for being a coward, mbwende, and for
behaving like a woman, chikadzi. Comrade Hondo went further and
accused him of being a traitor, threatened to kill him there and
then. In a choked voice, Douglas said, "That old woman, she
is my grandmother..."
"And that girl,
that musikana?"
"Chido. She is
my sister."
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