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Security
sector reform necessary now more than ever
Youth Forum
November 02, 2011
The violence
that rocked Harare yesterday, 1 November 2011, which was instigated
by the Zimbabwe Republic Police, fingered as one of the bodies criminally
pillaging diamonds
in Chiadzwa acts as a reminder that the security sector still
needs to reform in order to gain the support and trust of ordinary
Zimbabweans.
The fact that
the police, mandated with the duty of maintaining peace and restoring
order when there are disturbances, happens to be the troublemakers
during the violence, unashamedly exhibits the levels of lawlessness
and absence of the rule of law in the country.
When lawlessness
reaches levels where order maintaining agents become the nuisances,
the general citizenry will take the law unto their own hands and
deliver instant justice to the police.
It's understood
that the afternoon's chaos began when police tried to arrest
local vendors who retaliated, resulting in skirmishes with officers.
The police officers apparently retreated to get reinforcements,
but when they returned the vendors had scattered.
According to
the witnesses, a group of about 36 fully armed police officers stormed
Harvest House at around 1500Hrs, saying they were looking for the
illegal vendors. The officers blocked the main road outside the
headquarters and then started firing tear gas, both inside and outside
the building, causing MDC-T staff and passers-by to flee. Social
networking sites like Facebook were yesterday awash with images
from eyewitnesses of the police firing teargas on the public, as
the violence spread to other areas of the Central Business District
(CBD). Many businesses in the city had to close early because of
the skirmishes.
Zimbabwe, a
country with well-known organized criminal groups like Chipangano
that earnestly need police attention but has so far received none,
has seen the police, will be shocked why the police decide to expend
their energy on so-called vendors from one particular area of the
CBD before dealing with well-known criminals in the form of Chipangano.
Chipangano has
terrorized Harare residents for months now with the police turning
a blind eye, choosing to focus on 'vendors' working
inside the Harvest house. The same police force has also stopped
a number of MDC-T rallies lined up for Matebeleland North in the
past week, gatherings which had received a green light from the
High Court.
These events
only serve to show that without wholesome security sector reforms,
the country's political field will never be level and it is
up to the inclusive
government negotiators and SADC to commit to making sure that
such reforms are implemented before any election is called for.
The fact that
the police, together with the army and the Intelligence, have been
fingered as dubious beneficiaries of large sums of monies from Chiadzwa
diamonds will make it very difficult for the sector leaders to agree
to such reforms willingly. This makes it imperative for the relevant
authorities to realize that implementing the reforms will involve
a lot of sacrifices, sacrifices that are necessary for the benefit
of the country and eventually the region's citizenry to benefit
and become stable again.
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Forum fact
sheet
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