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Suspected
inter party violence
Zimbabwe
Civic Education Trust (ZIMCET)
July 12, 2006
ZIMCET
Harare/Chitungwiza region through the Mabvuku Tafara Peace Committee
has gathered the following around the brutal attack on Trudy Stevenson
and other Pro-Senate MDC senior officials just outside Mabvuku,
- Victims of
the attack are members of the Pro-Senate faction of the MDC.
- The victims
had just completed a political meeting in Mabvuku and were on
their way to town when the attack occurred.
- They were
attacked by assailants traveling in a truck that followed them
as they were leaving Mabvuku.
- The vehicle
used by the perpetrators allegedly belongs to the MP of Mabvuku,
Timothy Mubhawu who has since been implicated in the incident
and appeared in court.
The
story behind the attack is that the officials from the Pro-Senate
camp of the MDC had been going around Harare trying to establish
community structures. In so doing, they allegedly were approaching
Anti-Senate district leaders with promises of project monies so
as to entice their support in the process. District leaders known
to ZIMCET and allegedly approached in this manner are from Mufakose,
Mabvuku and Chitungwiza. The individuals are willing to testify
to this effect.
Information
is said to have reached the Anti-Senate camp on the plot to use
their existing structures to form rival structures. It has further
been revealed that when the team approached the Mabvuku structures,
they were told that names would be compiled for them for assistance
in the formation of their structures. Unknown to the Pro-Senate
officials, a trap had been set to way lay them. When the victims
were leaving Mabvuku, they were trailed by the assailants under
the guise of bringing the list of names of people prepared to work
with their camp. The Pro-Senate team apparently stopped to get the
names and this is when the attack occurred.
The
version of the story from the Pro-Senate camp is that they were
coming from a small meeting in Mabvuku when the Anti-Senate faction
attacked them. They allege that the attack was purely premised on
intolerance on the part of the other faction.
Information
on the ground is that the assailants are indeed supporters of the
Anti-Senate camp although it is not conclusive to determine if they
were sent by a higher authority to carry out the vicious act except
the revelations in The Herald of the 12th of July 2006
claiming that according to court proceedings, the youth were paid
twenty million dollars by the MP, Timothy Mubhawu and Abraham Kurimakwaramba,
both of the MDC Anti-Senate faction.
From
experience with working with political activists in the peace building
programme, the region can safely state that acts of violent conduct
such as the one perpetrated on Trudy and company had largely been
reduced over the past year and the recent attack does not in anyway
imply that political violence is on the increase in the region,
be it inter or intra party violence.
It
is common that party supporters often carryout violent attacks on
perceived rivals, not always because they will have been sent by
their leaders, but such attacks are often still attributed to the
leaders. Experience has shown that political allegiance often reaches
levels where party interests are guarded by supporters at whatever
cost. It is possible that the youth that carried out the attack
did so to safeguard the interests of their party because they felt
that the actions of their victims compromised such interests. It
is also possible that some leaders might have been aware of the
plan to carryout such an attack and ZIMCET hopes that the law enforcement
agents will do a thorough job to get to the root of the brutal attack.
It
is unfortunate that such a violent act still has room in the current
political dispensation that demands the merging ideas so as to tackle
the national challenges that continue to drive Zimbabwe to its knees.
We need to build bridges and it is unfortunate that some people
still believe that violence is the solution to make a statement
and silence opposing and divergent views.
Leaders
from the rival camps should, after the establishment of the facts
around the attack, make it very clear to their supporters that political
diversity does not warrant the use of violence. Such a responsibility
should not be confined to the press conference rooms and press statements,
but should be seen through actions. If our leaders are indeed genuine
in their calls for non-violence, they should realize that the use
of hate language is unacceptable. Political violence is no longer
an issue of the failure to accept political diversity in Zimbabwe
as the nation now realizes the proliferation of political parties.
Hate language has been largely responsible for intolerant behavior
by some party supporters as they view the verbal insulting of their
leaders as unacceptable and provocative.
ZIMCET
therefore recommends the following,
- The perpetrators
of violence of any form be quickly brought to book in accordance
with the laws of the country.
- Leaders of
all political parties denounce the use of hate language in the
promotion of political tolerance and peace.
- The media
treat violence of any form and from every quarter as equally
condemnable without sensationalizing some cases while down playing
others.
- The police
continue to deal with cases of violence and intolerance in a
non-partisan and professional manner.
- The nation
rallies behind all sincere initiatives that are aimed at promoting
dialogue as a vehicle for resolving the challenges that Zimbabwe
faces today.
- Peace committees
continue to bring together leaders of political parties to publicly
denounce any form of violence and demonstrate capacity to deal
with perpetrators through expulsion from the party if found
to be implicated.
The
issue of political violence and intolerance cannot be dealt with
in isolation. Political violence and intolerance should be included
in the ongoing attempts to build bridges by all stakeholders initiated
by the churches. It should be realized that it is a culmination
of a culture that we as Zimbabweans have allowed to pervade our
social fabric over our post independence era. It is therefore everyone’s
responsibility to ensure that some contribution is made, at an individual
and stakeholder level, towards erasing such a culture of violence
which is very unfortunate.
Visit the ZIMCET fact
sheet
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