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More
than 60 activists held, 40 beaten, claims NGO
IRIN
News
November 29, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56566
JOHANNESBURG -
More than 60 protesting Zimbabweans, some carrying babies, were
arrested and at least another 40 were allegedly assaulted by the
police in the country's second city, Bulawayo, on Wednesday.
"The level of
police brutality was shocking," said Annie Sibanda, of the activist
organisation Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), which had organised a peaceful march
to mark the launch of a 'People's Charter', a declaration on political
and economic rights, and the '16 Days of Activism Against Gender
Violence', an international campaign running until International
Human Rights Day on 10 December.
Sibande said the
demonstrators had congregated near the government offices in the
city centre, where they began reading out the People's Charter compiled
by WOZA, which calls on the state to provide affordable housing,
education and healthcare, when about 30 riot police arrived and
started arresting them.
She claimed that
63 men and women were taken to the Bulawayo central police station,
and another 40 demonstrators were rounded up and taken to a neighbouring
police drill room and allegedly beaten. Police then took six demonstrators,
including a woman who allegedly had her leg broken in the drill
room, to a public hospital for medical attention.
The police spokesman
in Bulawayo said they were unable to confirm the arrests and asked
IRIN to telephone again on Thursday.
Since its formation
in 2003, WOZA has taken to the streets regularly to highlight the
economic crisis, triggered in 2000 by Zimbabwe's fast-track land
reform programme. Unemployment levels have risen above 70 percent,
annual inflation is around 1,000 percent, and there are chronic
shortages of foreign currency, fuel and basic commodities. The government
blames sanctions imposed by the West for its economic problems.
Meanwhile, the
Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Unions (ZCTU) announced on Wednesday that it intends
to sue the government for about US$5.3 million for the alleged assault
and torture of several of its members arrested during a demonstration
in September.
"We have issued
a notice about our intention to sue. The state has three months
to respond," said ZCTU spokesman Mlamleli Sibanda. Fifteen ZCTU
members, including top officials, are each claiming between $239,000
and $319,000. "They [the members] sustained varying degrees of injuries,
and some are still in plasters three months after the beatings."
The Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR) issued a medical
report confirming that the 15 were assaulted while in police custody.
Police have reportedly claimed the unionists sustained the injuries
when they tried to jump from a moving vehicle after they had been
arrested.
"These were injuries
consistent with beatings with blunt objects, heavy enough to cause
fractures [9 fractures in 7 individuals] to hands and arms, and
severe and multiple soft-tissue injuries to the backs of the heads,
shoulders, arms, and buttocks and thighs," the ZADHR said in a statement.
A recent Human
Rights Watch report said the violent repression of civil society
organisations in Zimbabwe had intensified in the past three years
and cited the alleged assault of the unionists as an example.
Reginald Machaba
Hove, chairman of the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network and also a medical doctor who initially
examined the unionists, told Human Rights Watch: "I was really shocked
and taken back by what I saw. To me the injuries showed that they
[the unionists] were trying to protect themselves; they were trying
to protect their heads, using their raised arms."
IRIN was unable
to get comment from the government. Zimbabwe's Minister for State
Security, Didymus Mutasa, told IRIN earlier this month that the
unionists had provoked the police into taking action. "One of the
trade unionists had attacked a policeman at a roadblock. So then
the police told the trade unionists, 'Now you are in our hands,
we are beating you'. How can people attack the police and not expect
them to retaliate?"
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