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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
Campaign
of terror unleashed
United
States Department of State (Washington, DC)
May 08, 2008
http://www.america.gov/st/texttrans-english/2008/May/20080508135816xjsnommis0.2261927.html
The following
is a fact sheet from the U.S. State Department:
In the aftermath
of the March 29, 2008 elections, President Robert Mugabe's
ruling ZANU-PF party has unleashed a wave of political violence
designed to cow opposition members and supporters into submission
and deter them from participating or voting their conscience in
a possible runoff election.
Soldiers, police,
war veterans and youth militia loyal to the ruling party have been
deployed in rural areas throughout Zimbabwe to systematically intimidate
voters through killings, beatings, looting of property, burning
of homes and public humiliation. Women, children and the elderly
have not been spared. Civil society groups, particularly those involved
in election monitoring, and humanitarian organizations charged with
providing desperately needed food assistance also have been targeted.
Victims
(below statistics are as of May 5, 2008)
- Zimbabwe
election environment. Over 700
documented victims have required medical treatment for post-election
violence-related injuries, including over 200 requiring hospitalization
and surgical procedures. Many more victims are undocumented and
there are increasing reports that government authorities are preventing
victims from accessing medical treatment.
- At least
eighteen deaths have been confirmed.
- Victims have
suffered severe beatings, fractured bones and severe burns.
- Hundreds
of opposition supporters have fled their homes in fear. Homes
and businesses throughout rural areas have been burned and cattle
and other livestock slaughtered.
- At least
6,735 persons have been displaced.
- On April
25, police raided
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change party headquarters
and took over 100 persons into custody. The detainees were later
released.
- Credible
reports indicate the military has established torture bases across
the country.
- More than
130 white-owned commercial farms have come under siege by angry
mobs; out of these, some 30 farmers have been forced to abandon
their properties.
- Reports indicate
women and girls have been sexually assaulted.
- Government
security forces have raided civil society offices, confiscating
computers and files, destroying property and intimidating staff.
- Police raided
the offices of the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network, the independent organization that
monitored the March 29th election.
- Government
security forces beat
more than 50 members of the civil society organization, Women
of Zimbabwe Arise, for participation in a pro-democracy protest
on May 5; 11 persons were arrested.
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