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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Ambassador
Andrew Pocock seized as he investigates violence in Zimbabwe
Jan
Raath, The Times (UK)
May 14, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3927730.ece
The British Ambassador
to Zimbabwe and three other Western diplomats were intercepted and
detained by police yesterday as they tried to investigate the violence
being inflicted on Zimbabwe's rural population since the elections
in March. Andrew Pocock was held with the American, Japanese and
European Union Ambassadors, on a rural road about 90 miles (150km)
north of the capital, Harare. The diplomats, accompanied by journalists,
saw an interrogation and command centre run by ruling Zanu PF party
militias on a farm in the district, and visited two run-down local
hospitals where scores of people were recovering from wounds sustained
through beatings. The initiative by the group, which also included
the deputy ambassadors of Tanzania - which holds the chairmanship
of the African Union - and The Netherlands, is unique in Zimbabwe's
recent history.
Since early
April and the first confirmation of electoral victory by the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), the Government has deployed
thousands of supporters to "discipline" people, mostly
in rural areas, for having "voted the wrong way". Their
aim is to ensure that they vote differently in the expected presidential
election run-off between President Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai,
the MDC leader. According to medical
records, 24 people have been murdered and nearly a thousand
have needed treatment in hospital in what Zimbabwe
Doctors for Human Rights said at the weekend was unprecedented
brutality and callousness. The convoy of 11 diplomatic vehicles
had finished its tour yesterday when it was stopped at a police
roadblock. The ambassadors were told that their vehicles were obstructing
traffic and they were ordered to follow the police to the station.
The diplomats refused.
Two police vehicles parked
across the road to stop the convoy and were quickly reinforced by
senior police officers and state security agents. Kevin Stirr, the
US Embassy's democracy and governance officer, was asked by a security
agent what the group had been doing. "Looking at people who
have been beaten," he said. The Central Intelligence Organisation
agent replied: "We are going to beat you thoroughly, too",
before turning away and returning to his car. Mr Stirr pulled open
the door and shouted at him. The two agents in the vehicle tried
to flee, but James McGee, the US Ambassador, stood in their path.
When they tried to push him away with the car, he sat heavily on
the bonnet. He went on to take photographs of the agents, who were
trying to hide their faces. Earlier, at Mvurwi hospital, another
state security agent had tried to order Mr McGee to the station
"to verify some information."
The hospital gates were
closed by three officers armed with automatic rifles. These instructions
were also firmly rejected by Mr McGee. He then pulled the gate open
to let the convoy drive through. At Rhimbick sawmill near by, the
ambassadors surprised a senior lone war veteran by entering the
house commandeered as the "command centre" from where
a mob of about a hundred youths has been dispatched to brutalise
villagers almost nightly since April 28. In a large empty room the
diplomats found four well-thumbed exercise books filled with names,
many of which had been designated as "war collaborators".
The war veteran snatched away the books but only after a cameraman
had filmed several pages. "Clearly, questioning was done here,"
Mr Pocock said. Mr McGee said that the threats would not deter the
ambassadorial mission. "We are eager to continue this type
of thing, to show the world what is happening here in Zimbabwe.
It is absolutely urgent that the entire world sees what is going
on. The violence has to stop."
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