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Rural
opposition supporters live in fear
IRIN
News
March 21, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70848
HARARE - Fear has gripped opposition
supporters in rural Zimbabwe after a police crackdown on the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in the past few weeks.
Dubani Mlotshwa, a small-scale farmer
and grassroots opposition party official in the rural Nkayi district,
in the western province of Matabeleland North, said unknown assailants,
whom he suspected were ruling ZANU-PF party agents, had visited
his homestead and threatened his family for supporting the opposition.
"We are now living in constant fear.
The tension is high here; we are seeing people
we don't know these days, who move around saying they are looking
for all MDC supporters. We are now even scared of attending community
gatherings. I, for one, have been warned, and the people who came
to my homestead were strangers to me," said Mlotshwa.
Most rural areas have traditionally been
part of ZANU-PF's support base.
Tension has been mounting in Zimbabwe
for the past two months, marked by protests and running battles
with the police over a worsening economic crisis compounded by
shortages of foreign currency, food, fuel, electricity and medicines.
An opposition supporter was killed last
week, and Morgan Tsvangirai, who leads an MDC faction, was among
the pro-democracy leaders arrested and beaten by the police, allegedly
for inciting violence.
The leader of the other MDC faction,
Arthur Mutambara, was arrested with Tsvangirai and 47 other members
of the MDC when they gathered on Sunday (11 M arch) in the populous
suburb of Highfield in the capital, Harare, to attend a
prayer meeting.
The gathering was dispersed by heavily
armed police who arrested and allegedly beat up the activists, resulting
in Tsvangirai and Mutambara being hospitalised.
Abednico Bhebhe, the MDC legislator for
Nkayi, confirmed the anxiety felt by the opposition in rural Matabeleland
as well as other provinces. He said MDC supporters were being punished
because the authorities feared that the recent defiance campaign
by the opposition in urban centres might spread to the countryside.
"The regime is on the path of war with
the people of Zimbabwe. They were shaken by the spirit of defiance
that was shown by the MDC in major cities and now they want to move
swiftly to cow rural people into silence, but the time has absolutely
run out for them," he told IRIN.
Nathan Shamuyarira, the ZANU-PF spokesman,
denied the claims. "It's only the police who are instilling law
and order across the country. They have to do
this in view of the violence unleashed
by the MDC thugs recently on civilians and the police. Police have
a right to move around, even in rural areas; there is nothing new
here."
In a statement the MDC said it was "getting
disturbing reports of police officers and youth militias working
hand in glove to punish our supporters in rural areas. The systematic
violence, which started with the assaults and torture of our leadership
in Harare and Bulawayo [Zimbabwe's second city], including other
cities, is deplorable and uncalled for".
The ruling ZANU-PF should rein in its
supporters or "we are headed for widespread violence across the
country", the MDC statement warned.
Earlier this week, Nelson Chamisa, spokesman
for the Tsvangirai faction of the MDC, was beaten while he was preparing
to travel to Brussels for a meeting of parliamentarians from African,
Caribbean and Pacific states as well as the European Union.
Mutambara was among three people arrested
as they attempted to leave the country. The police said he could
not leave because he was facing charges in court.
Welshman Ncube, secretary-general of
the Mutambara-led faction of the MDC, claimed the members' arrest
"was an obvious attempt by an increasingly paranoid government to
ensure that the outside world does not get the true version of how
the rights of members of the opposition are being abused."
Ncube said, "The police acted in direct
defiance of last week's High Court order that directed that Mutambara
be released unconditionally. It is a mystery to us why they decided
to take him again, and deny him the basic human right of freedom
of movement."
Foreign Affairs Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi
summoned western envoys to his office on Monday, including those
from Britain, New Zealand, Australia and Sweden, while the United
States Ambassador, Christopher Dell, walked out before the minister
arrived at the meeting.
"Zimbabwe's tolerance is being stretched
to the limit," Mumbengegwi told the diplomats.
"You must scrupulously observe the relevant provisions of the Vienna
Convention governing the conduct of diplomatic relations. Any failure
to do so will leave us with no option but to invoke the relevant
conventions, so as to bring to an end any interference in our domestic
affairs."
He accused some of the envoys of interfering
in the internal affairs of Zimbabwe. He also accused the eight unnamed
ambassadors of visiting the police stations where MDC members were
being held in custody last week and giving them food.
The government has justified its crackdown
as an act of safeguarding public order across the country, maintaining
that the protesting parties were agents of Western countries, notably
the US and Britain, which have been accused of trying to effect
regime change in the country.
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