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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
They
made me chant Robert Mugabe is always right, while I was being beaten
Emily Dugan, The Independent (UK)
March 08, 2008
View story on
The Independent (UK) website
Takavafira Zhou is a
teacher who was tortured in Zimbabwe. Now he is in London for a
rally demanding change.
One of Zimbabwe's leading
human rights campaigners has issued the world with a startling reminder
of the horrific abuse and torture being suffered under Robert Mugabe's
regime ahead of the country's elections in three weeks' time. Takavafira
Zhou, a trade union activist, was seized by government police two
weeks ago and, while imprisoned, did not know if he would make it
out of the torture chamber alive. Beaten to within an inch of his
life, Mr Zhou was told to repeat the slogan "Robert Mugabe
is always right", and now he has come to Britain to preach
the reverse. Still bearing the scars that are a testament to President
Mugabe's brutal rule, Mr Zhou is to defy his oppressors by telling
protesters today at the Action for Southern Africa (Actsa) pro-democracy
rally in Trafalgar Square of the human rights violations taking
place in his country.
From there he and his
trade union colleagues will go to Brussels to lobby the EU commissioner
for Human Rights to take action against the dictator. Mr Zhou says
the time to act is now. "The suffering in Zimbabwe cannot continue
for another day," he said, on arrival in London yesterday.
"International leaders are complicit in human rights abuses
in Zimbabwe by their failure to provide a solution or to induce
a solution in Zimbabwe. We really wonder why Zimbabwe has taken
so long to get international help. In Kenya it did not take so long.
Why?" Three weeks from today, Zimbabweans will be going to
the polls, but Mr Zhou is not hopeful that the elections on 29 March
will be democratic. "There will be no free and fair elections
in Zimbabwe", he said. "And anyone who says there can
be is daydreaming."
At the end of the month,
the 84-year-old President will face two of his strongest opponents
yet: his former finance minister Simba Makoni, 57, backed by ruling
party rebels, and Morgan Tsvangirai, 55, the leader of the Movement
for Democratic Change. But many believe that even these strong candidates
do not stand a chance against the closely guarded regime of Mr Mugabe
and Zanu PF. Outside electoral observers are being brought in, but
opposition party members say that these will be taken entirely from
countries that Mr Mugabe perceives as "friendly" to the
regime. Russia is the only European country to have been invited
to monitor the elections while the majority of remaining observers
will be from the Southern African Development Community (SADC) -
a body which has already been criticised for dealing too leniently
with Mr Mugabe.
Zimbabwe's Foreign
Minister, Simbarashe Mumbengegwi, openly admitted yesterday that
countries which had opposed Mr Mugabe would not be invited to monitor
elections. "Clearly, those who believe that the only free and
fair election is where the opposition wins, have been excluded since
the ruling party, Zanu PF, is poised to score yet another triumph,"
Mr Mumbengegwi said. But another Mugabe win would be far from a
triumph for the Zimbabwean people, according to Lucia Matibenga,
the vice-president of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions, and an electoral candidate for the
MDC in Harare. She has also seen the catastrophic effects of Mr
Mugabe's tight grip of power, and will stand alongside Mr Zhou in
Trafalgar Square today. "I don't see that we are preparing
for free and fair elections given that violence is now institutionalised,"
said Ms Matibenga. "I think particularly in the rural areas
people will find it very difficult to vote against Zanu PF because
of the threats made against them. Chiefs are paid by Robert Mugabe
to use any means possible to ensure that their people vote for him."
For Mr Zhou,
the reasons for a democratic challenge to Mr Mugabe are compelling.
The 40-year-old university lecturer and president of the Progressive
Teachers Union has witnessed first-hand how the President's
clampdown on free speech has penalised innocent protesters. Two
weeks ago the human rights activist was leading a group of teachers
handing out leaflets in Harare to campaign against the country's
crippled education system when he was taken by Zanu PF militia.
The leafleting had taken place dangerously close to the party's
headquarters, and within minutes of being discovered all the teachers
were dragged into an underground cellar. Teams of 15 men used logs
and iron bars to beat them. Mr Zhou and his fellow campaigners were
battered - and some of the women sexually abused - with
the iron rods, until they were left motionless on the blood-stained
floor. "It was so terrible. I've never seen such thuggery;
I've never seen such brutality," said Mr Zhou.
When the beatings became
so bad that three of his fellow-protesters passed out, the police
became afraid and took them to hospital, where they remained under
police guard for four days. Now the police are trying to charge
them with criminal nuisance, but Mr Zhou says such a charge would
be a gross injustice. "I don't see what is criminal or what
is a nuisance about trying to save the collapsing education system",
he said. Last month, he lost his job as a history lecturer at Great
Zimbabwe University after submitting an anti-government paper. But
Zimbabwe's universities have been closed anyway for several weeks
now, as a jittery Mr Mugabe tightens his control on anti-government
sentiment ahead of the elections.
When Mr Mugabe -
a former school teacher himself - first became leader, there
was hope that he would usher in a new era for education in Zimbabwe.
But now, amid crippling inflation and government control, the schools
lie empty and dilapidated; 25,000 teachers abandoned their posts
last year, and a further 8,000 have left in this year already. The
few teachers who remain have been on strike since January over poor
pay and the introduction of untrained militia as teaching staff.
"This militarisation is what happened in Nazi Germany or with
Mussolini's youth militia", warned Mr Zhou, who says that the
teacher Mugabe of the 1960s would not have let such atrocities occur.
"The old Mugabe only wants his voice to be heard, but the young
Mugabe wanted to hear the voices of the oppressed," he said.
Teachers now have a salary of just four million Zimbabwean dollars,
enough for little more than eight bottles of cooking oil. Mr Mugabe's
soldiers, meanwhile are paid 2.3bn Zimbabwean dollars.
"When Mugabe was
28, he said: 'If the government touch a cent of my salary I'll box
them,'" said Mr Zhou. "We don't want to box Robert Mugabe;
we're saying teachers have legitimate demands that should be met
by the government." It is unclear what horrors will await Mr
Zhou on his return to Zimbabwe next week but he says he will not
be gagged in his attempts to hold back the dictator's lust for power.
"I am not afraid of going back," he said. "I take
casualties as part of the struggle and part of leadership. Zimbabweans
must note that they can't afford to stand on the touchline to watch
a game they should be playing. Dictators do not willingly give up
power, they need to be pushed."
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