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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Inside
Mugabe's violent crackdown
Craig
Timberg, Washington Post
July 05, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/04/AR2008070402771.html
President Robert
Mugabe summoned his top security officials to a government training
center near his rural home in central Zimbabwe on the afternoon
of March 30. In a voice barely audible at first, he informed the
leaders of the state security apparatus that had enforced his rule
for 28 years that he had lost the presidential vote held the previous
day.
Then Mugabe told the
gathering he planned to give up power in a televised speech to the
nation the next day, according to the written notes of one participant
that were corroborated by two other people with direct knowledge
of the meeting.
But Zimbabwe's military
chief, Gen. Constantine Chiwenga, responded that the choice was
not Mugabe's alone to make. According to two firsthand accounts
of the meeting, Chiwenga told Mugabe his military would take control
of the country to keep him in office or the president could contest
a runoff election, directed in the field by senior army officers
supervising a military-style campaign against the opposition.
Mugabe, the only leader
this country has known since its break from white rule nearly three
decades ago, agreed to remain in the race and rely on the army to
ensure his victory. During an April 8 military planning meeting,
according to written notes and the accounts of participants, the
plan was given a code name: CIBD. The acronym, which proved apt
in the fevered campaign that unfolded over the following weeks,
stood for: Coercion. Intimidation. Beating. Displacement.
In the three
months between the March 29 vote and the June 27 runoff election,
ruling-party militias under the guidance of 200 senior army officers
battered the Movement for Democratic Change, bringing the opposition
party's network of activists to the verge of oblivion. By election
day, more than 80 opposition supporters were dead, hundreds were
missing, thousands were injured and hundreds of thousands were homeless.
Morgan Tsvangirai, the party's leader, dropped
out of the contest and took
refuge in the Dutch Embassy.
This account reveals
previously undisclosed details of the strategy behind the campaign
as it was conceived and executed by Mugabe and his top advisers,
who from that first meeting through the final vote appeared to hold
decisive influence over the president.
The Washington Post was
given access to the written record by a participant of several private
meetings attended by Mugabe in the period between the first round
of voting and the runoff election. The notes were corroborated by
witnesses to the internal debates. Many of the people interviewed,
including members of Mugabe's inner circle, spoke on the condition
of anonymity for fear of government retribution. Much of the reporting
for this article was conducted by a Zimbabwean reporter for The
Post whose name is being withheld for security reasons.
What emerges from these
accounts is a ruling inner circle that debated only in passing the
consequences of the political violence on the country and on international
opinion. Mugabe and his advisers also showed little concern in these
meetings for the most basic rules of democracy that have taken hold
in some other African nations born from anti-colonial independence
movements.
Mugabe's party, the Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front, took power in 1980 after
a protracted guerrilla war. The notes and interviews make clear
that its military supporters, who stood to lose wealth and influence
if Mugabe bowed out, were not prepared to relinquish their authority
simply because voters checked Tsvangirai's name on the ballots.
"The small piece
of paper cannot take the country," Solomon Mujuru, the former
guerrilla commander who once headed Zimbabwe's military, told the
party's ruling politburo on April 4, according to notes of the meeting
and interviews with some of those who attended.
'Professional
killers'
The
plan's first phase unfolded the week after the high-level meeting,
as Mugabe supporters began erecting 2,000 party compounds across
the country that would serve as bases for the party militias.
At first, the beatings
with whips, striking with sticks, torture and other forms of intimidation
appeared consistent with the country's past political violence.
Little of it was fatal.
That changed May 5 in
the remote farming village of Chaona, located 65 miles north of
the capital, Harare. The village of dirt streets had voted for Tsvangirai
in the election's first round after decades of supporting Mugabe.
On the evening of May
5 -- three days after Mugabe's government finally released the official
results of the March 29 election -- 200 Mugabe supporters rampaged
through its streets. By the time the militia finished, seven people
were dead and the injured bore the hallmarks of a new kind of political
violence.
Women were stripped and
beaten so viciously that whole sections of flesh fell away from
their buttocks. Many had to lie facedown in hospital beds during
weeks of recovery. Men's genitals became targets. The official postmortem
report on Chaona opposition activist Aleck Chiriseri listed crushed
genitals among the causes of death. Other men died the same way.
At the funerals for Chiriseri
and the others, opposition activists noted the gruesome condition
of the corpses. Some in the crowds believed soldiers trained in
torture were behind the killings, not the more improvisational ruling-party
youth or liberation war veterans who traditionally served as Mugabe's
enforcers.
"This is what alerted
me that now we are dealing with professional killers," said
Shepherd Mushonga, a top opposition leader for Mashonaland Central
province, which includes Chaona.
Mushonga, a lawyer whose
unlined face makes him look much younger than his 48 years, won
a seat in parliament in the March vote on the strength of a village-by-village
organization that Tsvangirai's party had worked hard to assemble
in rural Mashonaland.
After Chaona, Mushonga
turned that organization into a defense force for his own village,
Kodzwa. Three dozen opposition activists, mostly men in their 20s
and 30s, took shifts patrolling the village at night. The men armed
themselves with sticks, shovels and axes small enough to slip into
their pants pockets, Mushonga said.
The same militias that
attacked Chaona worked their way gradually south through the rural
district of Chiweshe, hitting Jingamvura, Bobo and, in the predawn
hours of May 28, Kodzwa, where about 200 families live between two
rivers.
When about 25 ruling-party
militia members attempted to enter the village along its two dirt
roads, Mushonga said, his patrols blew whistles, a prearranged signal
for women, children and the elderly to flee south across one of
the rivers to the relative safety of a neighboring village.
Over the next few hours,
the two rival groups moved through Kodzwa's dark streets. Shortly
after dawn, Mushonga's 46-year-old brother, Leonard, and about 10
other opposition activists cornered five of the ruling-party militia
members. One of the militia members was armed with a bayonet, another
a traditional club known as a knobkerrie.
In the scuffle, Leonard
Mushonga and his group prevailed, beating the five intruders severely.
But he said that this small, rare victory revealed evidence that
elements of the army had been deployed against them.
One of the ruling-party
men, Leonard Mushonga said, carried a military identification badge.
In a police report on the incident, which led to the arrest of 26
opposition activists, the soldier was identified as Zacks Kanhukamwe,
47, a member of the Zimbabwe National Army. A second man, Petros
Nyguwa, 45, was listed as a sergeant in the army.
He was also listed as
a member of Mugabe's presidential guard.
Terror
brings results
The death toll mounted through May, and almost all of the
fatalities were opposition activists. Tsvangirai's personal advance
man, Tonderai Ndira, 32, was abducted
and killed. Police in riot gear raided opposition headquarters
in Harare, arresting hundreds of families that had taken refuge
there.
Even some of Mugabe's
stalwarts grew uneasy, records of the meetings show.
Vice President Joice
Mujuru, wife of former guerrilla commander Solomon Mujuru and a
woman whose ferocity during the guerrilla war of the 1970s earned
her the nickname Spill Blood, warned the ruling party's politburo
in a May 14 meeting that the violence might backfire. Notes from
that and other meetings, as well as interviews with participants,
make clear that she was overruled repeatedly by Chiwenga, the military
head, and by former security chief Emerson Mnangagwa.
Mnangagwa, 61, earned
his nickname in the mid-1980s overseeing the so-called Gukurahundi,
when a North Korea-trained army brigade slaughtered thousands of
people in a southwestern region where Mugabe was unpopular. From
then on, Mnangagwa was known as the Butcher of Matabeleland.
The ruling party turned
to Mnangagwa to manage Mugabe's runoff campaign after first-round
results, delayed for five weeks, showed Tsvangirai winning but not
with the majority needed to avoid a second round.
The opposition, however,
had won a clear parliamentary majority.
In private briefings
to Mugabe's politburo, Mnangagwa expressed growing confidence that
the violence was doing its job, according to records of the meetings.
After Joice Mujuru raised concerns about the brutality in the May
14 meeting, Mnangagwa said only, "Next agenda item," according
to written notes and a party official who witnessed the exchange.
At a June 12 politburo
meeting at party headquarters, Mnangagwa delivered another upbeat
report.
According to one participant,
he told the group that growing numbers of opposition activists in
Mashonaland Central, Matabeleland North and parts of Masvingo province
had been coerced into publicly renouncing their ties with Tsvangirai.
Such events were usually held in the middle of the night, and featured
the burning of opposition party cards and other regalia.
Talk within the ruling
party began predicting a landslide victory in the runoff vote, less
than three weeks away.
Mugabe's demeanor also
brightened, said some of those who attended the meeting. Before
it began, he joked with both Mnangagwa and Joice Mujuru.
It was the first time
since the March vote, one party official recalled, that Mugabe laughed
in public.
'Nothing
to go back to'
The
opposition's resistance in Chiweshe gradually withered under intensifying
attacks by ruling-party militias. After the stalemate in Kodzwa,
the militias continued moving south in June, finally reaching Manomano
in the region's southwestern corner.
The opposition leader
in Manomano was Gibbs Chironga, 44, who had won a seat in the local
council as part of Tsvangirai's first-round landslide in the area.
The Chirongas were shopkeepers with a busy store in Manomano. To
defend that store, they kept a pair of shotguns on hand.
On June 20, a week before
the runoff election, Mugabe's militias arrived in Manomano with
an arsenal that had grown increasingly advanced as the vote approached.
Some carried AK-47 assault
rifles, which are standard issue for Zimbabwe's army. For the attack
on Manomano, witnesses counted six of the weapons.
About 150 militia members,
some carrying the rifles, circled the Chironga family home. Gibbs
Chironga fired warning shots from his shotgun, relatives and other
witnesses recalled. Yet the militiamen kept coming. They broke open
the ceiling with a barrage of rocks, then used hammers to batter
down the walls.
When Gibbs Chironga emerged,
a militia member shot him with an AK-47, said Hilton Chironga, his
41-year-old brother, who was wounded by gunfire. Gibbs died soon
after.
His brother, sister and
mother were beaten, then handcuffed and forced to drink a herbicide
that burned their mouths and faces, relatives said.
Both Hilton Chironga
and his 76-year-old mother, Nelia Chironga, were taken to the hospital
in Harare, barely able to eat or speak. The whereabouts of Gibbs
Chironga's sister remain unknown. The family home was burned to
the ground.
"There's nothing
to go back to at home," Hilton Chironga said softly, a bandage
covering the wounds on his face and a pair of feeding tubes snaking
into his nostrils.
"Even if I go back,
they'll finish me off. That is what they want," he said.
Two days later, as Mugabe's
militias intensified their attacks, Tsvangirai dropped out of the
race.
Groups of ruling-party
youths took over a field on the western edge of downtown Harare
where he was attempting to have a rally, and soon after, he announced
that the government's campaign of violence had made it impossible
for him to continue. Privately, opposition officials said the party
organization had been so damaged that they had no hope of winning
the runoff vote.
On election day, Mugabe's
militias drove voters to the polls and tracked through ballot serial
numbers those who refused to vote or who cast ballots for Tsvangirai
despite his boycott.
The 84-year-old leader
took the oath of office two days later, for a sixth time. He waved
a Bible in the air and exchanged congratulatory handshakes with
Chiwenga, whose reelection plan he had adopted more than two months
before, and the rest of his military leaders.
About the same time,
a 29-year-old survivor of the first assault in Chaona, Patrick Mapondera,
emerged from the hospital. His wife, who had also been badly beaten,
was recovering from skin grafts to her buttocks. She could sit again.
Mapondera had been the
opposition chairman for Chaona and several surrounding villages.
If and when the couple returns home, he said, he does not expect
to take up his job again.
"They've destroyed
everything," he said.
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