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Rituals
outreach team arrested and detained in Manicaland
Rooftop
Promotions
January 07, 2011
The Rooftop
Promotions ten member team of Rituals, which includes 8 artists,
1 driver and 1 tour manager currently on a national tour, was arrested
on the late afternoon of the 5th January 2011 and detained at Cashel
Valley Police station in a case that is not only disrespectful to
the work of artists but also poses serious challenges to the commitment
of the GNU to healing and reconciliation. The team had finished
two performances for that day when they were invited to the police
station to answer a few questions then later detained for the night
without any clear charges. Those arrested constitute arguably Zimbabwes
crème de la crème and are multi-award winners in their
craft. They are Chipo Bizure, popularly known as Eve in Studio 263,
Zenzo Nyathi, popularly known as Mzambani on Amakorokoza, Silvanos
Mudzvova, Mandla Moyo, Joyce Mpofu and Rutendo Chigudu. The team
spent two nights (Wednesday and Thursday) in the cells and are due
to appear in court today (Friday) represented by Cosmos Chibaya
instructed by Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights
It is sadly
interesting that our artistic work in promoting national healing
and reconciliation, through a play that has been seen by the Organ
on National Healing Reconciliation and Integration and has been
approved by the Board of Censors, is being thwarted like this when
the three principals in the GPA
agreed to prioritise national healing and reconciliation in their
end of year address to the nation. We are disturbed, and I should
hasten to say not discouraged or disheartened, by this behaviour
from this particular police station especially considering that
we hold a valid censorship certificate from a board which falls
under the same ministry (Home Affairs) with the police. We do not
take this irrational act lightly at all because there is nothing
funny about sleeping in a police cell for doing your job and what
makes the situation even more disturbing is that we notified the
police appropriately according to the provisions of POSA
and had done 16 performances of the same play in that same province
late last year and we were only left with 4 performances hanging
in order to fulfil our Manicaland quota says Daves Guzha the founder
and producer of Rooftop Promotions.
We learnt about
the arrest on the 5th January around 5pm and contacted Officer in
Charge Inspector Chasara at Cashel Valley Police Station to establish
the charges being levelled against the team but he was very evasive
with that information and they went ahead to place them in cells.
Only yesterday was it stated through a Sergeant Major, who refused
to be known by his name, did they state the team was being judged
for criminal nuisance under section 46 and there crime was disturbing
peace. Theatre is one of the things exempted under POSA and AIPPA
but we still have always notified police of our activities every
time and in this case we released a schedule to Mutare Central Police
which stated the areas we were covering when we started this tour
and out of the 20 scheduled performances for Manicaland, we were
left with only four at the time of arresting and detaining our team.
The teams story,
which was supported by people who watched the performance, was that
they started off very well, the people loved the show and it was
only when the play ended that a police detail who was recording
the show confronted them and invited them to the station to answer
a few questions to do with the clearance of staging the play. They
explained everything but still they were detained and it was only
at 6am in the morning that the charge shifted to criminal nuisance
whereupon they were asked to pay a fine of $20.00 each which they
refused in no uncertain terms and insisted they will wait for the
Producer since they believed they had not breached any peace but
just did their job to entertain and educate people. When we arrived
at Cashel Valley Police station, the said Sergeant Major reiterated
the same and said he had instructions from the Officer In Charge
to make the team pay the said fine or be detained and taken to court
something that we also could not accept since paying a fine technically
means admission of guilt to a crime the team insisted they never
committed.
As an artist
who believes in the role of theatre in promoting healing and reconciliation,
I watched in pain as I saw my colleagues being escorted by gun wielding
officers as though they were some high profile criminals and the
sad part of it was that they were being locked up for promoting
a national agenda. I did not know whether I needed to be disappointed
with the particular police officers or the entire law enforcement
system of my country as I saw the country's arts talent being
criminalised for doing a play on healing and reconciliation. At
a time when the principals and parties in the GPA are pushing for
reforms and reconciliation before elections, it is unfortunate that
some law enforcing agents cannot wake up and smell the coffee but
still want to live in the Zimbabwe that everyone else agrees was
not good, says Tafadzwa Muzondo the Marketing & Sales Executive
for Rooftop Promotions.
Written by Stephen
Chifunyise after going through a research on community approaches
to healing and reconciliation, directed and produced by Daves Guzha,
featuring Mandla Moyo, Zenzo Nyathi, Joyce Mpofu, Chipo Bizure,
Silvanos Mudzvova and Rutendo Chigudu, Rituals is a story told in
panoramic fashion chronicling how community initiated cultural solutions
meet with serious challenges which either prevent their conclusive
enactment or achievement of the desired results.
The fact that
this production is a result of a community research we commissioned
the writer to do in order to come up with a play that encourages
community initiated or driven healing and reconciliation processes
means it came from the people and we have to take back to them with
our artistic input in order to entertain and educate them. The play
has had up to 30 performances after its successful premiere at Theatre
in the Park last year and also became an instant hit when it was
performed at the All Africa Dance for Peace Festival in Nairobi
Kenya last year. It has also been hailed as an effective tool of
making people begin dialogue and ultimately start their own processes
of healing and reconciliation as a community, says Daves Guzha the
Producer of Rooftop Promotions.
In discussions
and comments after the play, most audience members expressed the
need to have more of such programs in order to demystify the culture
of fear and violence in favour of tolerance and unity in communities.
One of the audience members actually said: "People like us
who have access to newspapers and other information know that there
is an Organ on Healing & Reconciliation but we have not seen
what it is doing to do its work. There are not coming to us to hear
our concerns, our grievances and suggestions so how do they expect
to heal us and reconcile us?"
The Sergeant
Major tried to coax us into paying a fine for a crime we never committed
and as artists we took a collective stand to let the law take its
course because we are not criminals but professionals doing our
job. But after our lawyer communicated that decision to him, he
started becoming un-cooperative and ordered us to beck in cells.
One of the ladies wanted some sanitary pads locked in the car but
he refused and we believe they are using our liberty as a bargaining
tool to get out clean with unlawfully detaining us. As artists,
we encourage people to stand for themselves and their rights so
if we cannot stand for ourselves and our rights also then we become
do as I say not as I do prophets. We refuse to be incriminated for
doing our work and fending for our families, says Silvanos Mudzvova,
one of the cast members of Rituals.
Rituals was
performed at the initiated Institute for Justice and Reconciliation
indaba which brought together participants from Zimbabwe's
all political parties including the Organ on National Healing and
Reconciliation. It is available on DVD.
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