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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
Briefing
Paper #1 - Statements from ZANU(PF) members inciting violence
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
February 22, 2002
Statements by President Mugabe
During the election
campaign:
"We are saddened
that there are others who want us divided. But people must not listen
to small, petty little ants which we can crush." (March 1990)
White farmers are
"hard-hearted, you would think they were Jews." (1992)
At public gathering:
"Those who
try to cause disunity among our people must watch out because death
will befall them." (March 2000)
Warning the opposition
leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, that he was playing with fire:
"Let him not
start the fire which may engulf him!" (April 2000)
Told the ZANU (PF)
congress that the commercial farmers have "declared war" on
the people of Zimbabwe. He says that the white man is "not indigenous"
to Africa and is part of an "evil alliance." He tells his audience
"we must continue to strike fear into the heart of the white man,
our real enemy." His audience reply with chants of "hondo"
(war). The courts can do whatever they want, but no judicial decision
will stand in our way . . . My own position is that we should not even
be defending our position in the courts. We cannot . . .brook interference
court impediment to the land acquisition programme." (December 2000)
Speaking in Bulawayo:
"Yes, there
are hardships, but if they (white industrialists) leave, it’s a good
thing, because we will take over the companies. To those of you who
support whites, we say down with you." (1 September 2001)
Speaking at a textile
company, owned by a prominent Jewish family in Bulawayo:
"Jews in South
Africa, working in cahoots with their colleagues here, want our textile
and clothing factories to close down."
Speaking at a ZANU
(PF) party congress in Victoria Falls he urged his supporters to go to
war against the MDC.
"This is total
war. We will have a central command centre. This is war, it is not a
game. You are all soldiers of ZANU (PF) or the people. When we come
to your province we must see you are ready. When the time comes to fire
the bullet, the ballot, the trajectory of the gun must be true."
(15 December 2001)
Statement by Vice-President
Msika
"Whites are
not human beings . . ." (August 2001)
Statements by Government
Ministers, Governors and Zanu (PF) Members of Parliament
Minister Mahachi:
"We will move
door to door, killing like we did to Chiminya. I am the Minister responsible
for defence therefore I am capable of killing." (June 2000)
Minister Mudenge
Speaking at a teachers
college:
"You are going
to lose your jobs if you support opposition political parties in the
presidential election. As civil servants, you have to be loyal to the
government of the day. You can even be killed for supporting the opposition
and no one would guarantee your safety." (July 2001)
Minister Jonathan
Moyo
Briefing a press freedom
group he warned that Zimbabwe’s independent media must expect violence
for "provoking" supporters of President Robert Mugabe’s regime.
He said it was "understandable" that journalists who were seen
as supporting an anti-ruling party agenda would be threatened with violence.
(May 2001)
Deputy Minister
Aeneas Chigwedere (now a full Minister)
His ministry would
not provide security to teachers affected by violence perpetrated by war
veterans and ZANU (PF) supporters for supporting the opposition. (June
2001)
Statements from
Members of Parliament and high-ranking ZANU (PF) officials
Governor Josaya
Hungwe
Hungwe said a war
would be declared if ZANU (PF) lost the mayoral election. Hungwe said:
"If you do
not vote for ZANU (PF) in the coming mayoral election, people are going
to be killed. I want to tell you, someone is going to die." (April
2001)
Hungwe threatened
white commercial farmers with war if they did not vote for the ruling
party. He said
"We do not
want another war. If you want peace you should support me and the ruling
party . . . If you want trouble vote for another party." (May 2000)
C Hunzvi (the late
war veteran and Member of Parliament)
"Whosoever
is killed , it’s tough luck." (December 2000)
Didymus Mutasa
An ex-Minister and a high-ranking ZANU (PF) official
"Those who
do not understand must be beaten until they do understand" (July
2001)
Philip Chiyangwa,
ZANU (PF) MP
Chiyangwa was filmed
by television cameras inciting party youths to commit acts of violence
on commercial farms. He told the youths:
"If you get
hold of MDC supporters, beat them until they are dead. Burn their farms
and their workers’ houses, then run away fast and we will blame the
burning of the workers’ houses on the whites. Report to the police,
because they are ours." (August
2001)
Minister Ignatius
Combo and Philip Chiyangwa addressed a meeting of farmers in Banket. In
the course of the meeting, in front of 200 witnesses, Mr Chiyangwa said
"…anyone who supports the MDC will be eliminated." (October
2001)
Statements from
war veteran leaders
Andrew Ndlovu
Threatened to use
violence to overthrow the MDC if it won the upcoming election. He said
that the war veterans would never allow the country to go back to Smith
and if the MDC did come to power the war veterans would declare a military
government. He said:
"We will get
arms to defend the government of ZANU (PF). We will invade military
camps just as we have gone to the farms." (March 2000)
Reiterating threat,
"We will not
accept an MDC victory. If they win we will go back to war." (August
2001)
Comrade Zimbabwe
Told farm workers
that the opposition would pay dearly if it won the elections. He said
"If ZANU (PF)
loses this election, you will not say that I did not warn you. If we
lose, we will get out our guns. We cannot allow the MDC to sell our
country."
He also said
"We will be
at the voting stations. If ZANU (PF) loses, the way forward will be
filled with war. You will witness our strength in the coming weeks."
He wore a T-shirt marked "No Monkey Business - Vote ZANU (PF)"
(May 2000)
Edmore Hwarare
Said that the ex-combatants
would not accept election results if any opposition party won the elections.
He said the president of the MDC should train its own soldiers to fight
ZANU (PF) if he wants to rule the country.
"This country
was won through the loss of blood and not elections. Therefore, if anyone
wants to take it he should go to war with the ruling party. Even if
other people accept the results, we will not.
"We are married
to this country and Mugabe. We are going to support Mugabe until we
bury him."
He said that teachers
who support the MDC must resign from the civil service and go full-time
into politics. War veterans would ensure that salaries of teachers supporting
MDC were cut before the elections. (June 2000)
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