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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of results, reports, press stmts and articles on March 31 2005 General Election - post Mar 30
Post-election
crackdown underway
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 27, 08-Apr-05)
By Chipo Sithole in Harare
April 08, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_027_1_eng.txt
While Zimbabwean
president Robert Mugabe attended the funeral of Pope John Paul II
in Rome on April 8, back home a post-election crackdown on his domestic
opponents was getting underway.
Just a week
after Zimbabweans went to the polls – with international monitors
and journalists once again out of the picture – police arrested
the youngest MP from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change,
MDC, which won 41 out of 120 seats in an election that has been
widely denounced as rigged.
There have also
been reports of the murder of another MDC activist by supporters
of Mugabe’s ZANU PF party and attacks on white farmers and their
employees.
The arrest of
Nelson Chamisa, the 26-year-old MP for the Harare constituency of
Kuwadzana, only became known when he managed to send out text messages
on his mobile phone to friends in the domestic media.
The messages
suggested police and agents from the Central Intelligence Organisation,
CIO, were torturing him.
"I am in
trouble," Chamisa wrote in one.
Chamisa was
arrested on the afternoon of April 7 after being informed at a police
roadblock that he was wanted in connection with a spate of anti-government
demonstrations in central Harare on April 4.
Chamisa’s lawyer,
Alex Muchadehama, said his client handed himself in and was initially
detained in a central Harare police station before being transferred
and held overnight in police cells at Matapi, in the Mbare township
on the outskirts of the city. Muchadehama said the police intended
to charge Chamisa with inciting public violence.
An appearance
in the courts is likely on April 11.
"They are
determined to torture him," said Muchadehama. "I don’t
see him being taken to court today or even at the weekend... [The]
Matapi cells are very filthy and the transfer is a way of humiliating
him.
"Why they
are detaining him I just don’t understand… he surrendered himself
and he won’t run away."
The police cells
at Matapi are renowned for being the filthiest in a country where
prison conditions generally are grim.
Muchadehama
said there were no signs of obvious physical injury when he met
Chamisa briefly – but the MP looked dishevelled and disoriented,
suggesting that some form or torture or intense interrogation had
taken place.
The police are
alleging that Chamisa organised young demonstrators who ran through
the city centre stoning shop windows. During the alleged demonstration,
the MDC youths apparently distributed pamphlets which said "Reject
Fraud" and urged people not to accept the results of the parliamentary
election.
Reports coming
in from around the country suggest Chamisa’s arrest is part of a
broader wave of post-election violence organised by the government
against its political opponents.
In Kwekwe, about
160 kilometres southwest of Harare – where ZANU PF parliamentary
speaker Emmerson Mnangagwa was defeated at the polls by MDC candidate
Blessing Chebundo – a young MDC activist has been found dead, with
his stomach slit open, after an alleged attack by ZANU PF supporters.
And on April
6, a security guard on a white-owned farm at Marondera, 80 km east
of the capital, was beaten to death and the farmer himself was attacked
by ZANU PF land invaders.
"ZANU PF
have begun systematically hunting down people who voted for us and
our election agents," said the MDC’s secretary general Welshman
Ncube. "The attacks started on Sunday, after the last result
was announced. People have fled. Others are missing and no one knows
what has happened to them."
He added that
he had heard reports of more attacks on the remaining 400 white-owned
farms in Zimbabwe. There were 5000 such farms when President Mugabe
first launched his strategy of land seizures before the last parliamentary
election in 2000.
*Chipo Sithole
is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
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