|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Zimbabwe
army speaks on political violence
Cuthbert
Nzou, ZimOnline
May 08, 2008
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=3132
Zimbabwe's
army on Wednesday broke its silence on political violence in the
country to reject charges that soldiers have violated human rights
and murdered opposition supporters since March when President Robert
Mugabe's government suffered electoral defeat.
Army deputy public relations
officer, Major Alphios Makotore, said the army was concerned by
the allegations that soldiers have spearheaded a campaign of violence,
torture and murder against opposition supporters to force them to
vote for Mugabe in a second round presidential election.
Zimbabwe holds a presidential
run-off poll at a yet unknown date after opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai defeated Mugabe in a March 29 election but failed to
garner more than 50 percent of the vote required to takeover the
presidency.
Makotore said: "The
Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) wishes to raise concerns over articles
being published in the print and the electronic media on allegations
relating to the alleged political violence, assaults, harassment
and robberies perpetrated by men in army uniforms . . . the army
categorically distances itself and any of its members from such
activities."
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) party accuses the army of spearheading
and directing a campaign of violence and murder by gangs of ruling
ZANU PF party youths and war veterans that the opposition says has
killed 24 of its members and displaced another 5 000, while 800
homesteads have been burnt down.
The MDC has alleged that
the army has deployed more than 200 senior soldiers to orchestrate
violence in what the opposition party has described as a war being
waged by Mugabe against voters in a bid to intimidate them to grant
him another five years in office.
MDC spokesman Nelson
Chamisa insisted that the army was heavily involved in political
violence, adding that his party had compiled a full list of army
officers at the forefront of committing human rights abuses.
"We have names
of soldiers perpetrating violence," Chamisa said. "No
amount of denials will take away the fact that the army, police,
CIO agents, war veterans and ZANU PF militia are brutalizing our
supporters."
Worsening political violence
in Zimbabwe - a country also grappling with its worst ever
economic crisis and food shortages - has raised an outcry
by the international community with United Nations chief Ban Ki-Moon
saying on Monday that he was concerned with the violence, adding
he was consulting African leaders on how to resolve the situation.
The UN Secretary General
spoke as the head of the African Union Commission, Jean Ping, visited
Zimbabwe for talks with Mugabe on the country's deepening
political crisis.
While also this week
South African President Thabo Mbeki, the Southern African Development
Community's mediator in Zimbabwe, dispatched a team of officials
led by Cabinet Minister Sydney Mufamadi to probe post-election violence
in Zimbabwe.
Mufamadi's team
was expected to meet all political players in a bid to find a solution
to the violence and ensure that the second round presidential ballot
is held in a free and fair environment.
No date has been set
for the run-off election while Tsvangirai - who maintains
he was cheated of outright victory in the first round poll -
is yet to commit himself to contesting the second round ballot.
Tsvangirai is widely
expected to win the run-off poll on the back of a worsening economic
crisis that has fed voter anger against Mugabe and is marked by
an acute shortage of food and the world's highest inflation
of more than 160 000 percent.
However analysts warn
that a violent onslaught by army-backed ZANU PF against Tsvangirai's
supporters and MDC structures could effectively alter the political
equation and deliver victory to Mugabe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|