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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Cases
of political violence mount
Jason
Moyo, Mail and Guardian (SA)
May 08, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=338744&area=/insight/insight__africa/
In an indication of how
blatant election-related violence has become in Zimbabwe, witnesses
have described how a 24-year-old man was chased into a police station
in Muzarabani, north of Harare, last Sunday and beaten to death.
The man, known only as
"Tairos" in police records, is one of at least 25 people
the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) claims have died in post-election
violence.
Quoting doctors treating
the injured, the Sunday Independent reported at the weekend that
7 000 people had been injured in the mounting violence.
In response, two regional
delegations visited Zimbabwe this week, one from the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) and one led by President Thabo Mbeki's
chief facilitator, Provincial and Local Government Minister Sydney
Mufamadi.
MDC members said Mufamadi
was presented with what opposition and human rights groups say is
evidence of worsening Zanu-PF attacks, including video footage showing
burned-out homes of opposition supporters and testimony from assault
victims.
But the meeting was described
as "tense". The MDC has reportedly written to Mbeki protesting
against what they see as his bias and this had "put a shadow
over this week's meetings", a senior adviser to MDC leader
Morgan Tsvangirai said.
Witnesses said Tairos,
a tractor driver at a government-run farm in the area, was seized
from his home and dragged to a police station, where he was ordered
to point out policemen sympathetic to the MDC.
Unable to do this, he
was beaten to death. Police officers tried to protect him, but they
were outnumbered by the Zanu-PF militia, which one witness said,
numbered more than 100.
The Mail & Guardian
was shown a police report made at the Mvurwi provincial police station
claiming the man was killed in inter-party clashes provoked by MDC
activists.
The opposition charges
police complicity in the continuing violence, but police officers
themselves are under threat. They face pressure not to open dockets
against Zanu-PF activists accused of violence, officers told the
M&G.
Zanu-PF militia have
sealed off rural areas to journalists and human-rights groups, while
residents wishing to leave have to seek "authorization letters"
from local Zanu-PF leaders.
"We believe the
tally is much worse than the 25 dead we can report, because access
to some rural and farming areas has been impeded," said MDC
spokesperson Nelson Chamisa.
A private hospital in
Harare has opened a "special ward" for victims of violence,
a doctor told reporters visiting the facility. Inside the ward dozens
of people are nursing injuries, most commonly broken limbs and burns.
As charges of violence
escalated President Robert Mugabe met an SADC delegation on Tuesday.
Tomasz Salomao, SADC executive secretary, said "the message
of the chairperson of the organ on politics, defence and security
[Angolan President Eduardo dos Santos] is to urge the political
parties in Zimbabwe to participate in the run-off, in full observation
of the law".
Salomao's team hopes
to meet Tsvangirai, who left Zimbabwe immediately after the elections.
Emmerson Mnangagwa, Mugabe's chief election agent and Zanu-PF's
legal secretary, charged that the MDC is arming militia, called
"democratic resistance committees", to attack Mugabe supporters,
the police and army.
A free election was impossible
unless the MDC dismantled these militia, he said this week. "To
ensure a peaceful campaign in the run-off period, Zanu-PF calls
upon the MDC to dismantle these committees," Mnangagwa said.
Zanu-PF said a combination
of Western interference and corruption at the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission had "poisoned the environment against Zanu-PF".
The SADC mission and
Mufamadi were also due to meet independent Simba Makoni.
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