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Zimbabwe Inclusive Government Watch : Issue 28
Sokwanele
June 15, 2011
Polarisation
of the three GPA
signatories continues to develop. Zanu PF hardliners pushed for
President Mugabe to abandon the GPA and mediation efforts by South
African President Jacob Zuma on behalf of SADC with regard to the
proposed roadmap to elections. The security forces are seen to be
the biggest instigators in this position over fears that an agreed
upon document will allow too many concessions to the MDC thereby
weakening Zanu PF's hold on political and military power.
Of the 100 media
articles recorded in this edition of ZIG Watch for May, Zanu PF
continue to be the party seemingly determined to stall or prevent
full implementation of the GPA. Each recorded article signifies
a unique breach of the terms set out in the GPA and by categorising
these articles according to the nature of the breach, we have generated
representative statistics.
Violations in
the form of violence, intimidation, hate speech, threats, abductions
and brutality were in shared first place with cases of economic
destabilisation, or efforts to entrench corrupt practices, with
23 articles (23.0% of total each).
Legal harassment
of perceived opposition politicians and supporters, was in third
place with 20 articles (20.0% of total), whilst fourth place was
occupied by violations denying freedom of speech, with 11 articles
(11.0% of total).
In total, these
four categories of breaches (77 articles) account for 77.0% of the
total analysed. Zanu-PF were either responsible for, or involved
in, 99.0% of all breaches recorded.
We have compiled
ten articles at the end of this report to represent the media's
coverage of events in relation to the GPA. This list is neither
comprehensive nor exhaustive in exposing the volume of human rights
violations against the people of Zimbabwe.
We therefore invite all our readers to review the summaries (or
original articles) of all articles (and if possible, previously
captured articles) on the webpage http://www.sokwanele.com/zigwatch
and ask you to share this information with your colleagues and other
interested parties.
We begin our
report with selected articles illustrating this month's most significant
violation of the GPA - that of violence, intimidation, hate speech,
threats, abductions and brutality. The first article detailing the
lives of 40 families in the diamond
rich area of Chiadzwa who were beaten and forcibly removed from
their homes by the military, while their property was destroyed.
This follows their refusal to move without compensation but the
Chinese mining firm Anjin recruited the soldiers to force their
removal.
A Zimbabwe Republic
Police officer was killed on 29 May in Harare by alleged MDC-T youths
because the officer was investigating an alleged illegal gathering
by party members. It is unclear at this stage who was responsible
for the death but police and Zanu PF militia have retaliated by
violently cracking down and arresting
MDC-T activists in the Glen View area. Police Chief Augustine
Ghihuri warned MDC-T supporters said to be behind the killing that
they would 'die by the sword'. He said that the murder undermined
the MDC-T's claims of being a non-violent party, and that the police
would not rest whilst "opposition" activists tried to
make the country ungovernable.
Economic destabilisation
partners with the article on the displaced Chiadzwa families: Minister
of Mines Obert Mpofu said the families will only receive compensation
if the international community allows the free sale of Zimbabwe's
diamonds on the open market. "Where do you think we will get
the money to compensate them when the same people who are advocating
the ban of our diamond sales are the same pushing for the government
to compensate villagers? That's idiotic and nonsensical. We will
only get the money to compensate the villagers when our diamonds
are sold freely internationally" said Mpofu.
An economic
row has erupted in Matabeleland North between Gwayi Sub-Catchment
Council and newly licensed coal mining companies on the issuing
of licences by the Ministry of Mines. The council is accusing the
mines of illegally obtaining the rights to extract coal in Sinamatela
within the Hwange National Park. Concerns over pollution in the
Gwayi-Shangani dam and Lulosi River seem to be at the centre of
the dispute.
Our final article
dealing with economic destabilisation shows how thousands of villagers
in Chisumbanje are living in abject poverty following their displacement
from communal lands to make way for a bio-fuel project by the Agricultural
and Rural Development Authority (ARDA) and Macdom, owned by Billy
Rautenbach. The project has procured 30 000 acres of land a move
that traditional authorities have been forced to accept even though
the acquisition has not been approved by the local council.
Legal harassment
of perceived opposition politicians and supporters sees civil society
activists and lawyers being arrested
and expelled from the SADC summit in Namibia. Among those arrested
were Irene Petras from Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights, Joy Mabenge of the Institute for Democratic
Alternatives for Zimbabwe (IDAZIM), and freelance journalist Jealousy
Mawarire. They were interrogated by Zimbabwean CIO agents who were
leading the interrogation of the activists, along with Namibian
police, illustrating the partisan position of SADC security organs.
The second article
illustrating legal harassment records that two ZimRights
employees, Florence Ndlovu and Walter Dube, who had been missing
since their arrest
on Monday 23rd, were finally located by their lawyers at a Lupane
police station on Thursday 27th. Although police at Nyamandlovu
Police Station had denied holding Ndlovu and Dube, the ZimRights
employees said they had been held at the police station since the
previous Monday, where they were denied access to their lawyers.
The pair were only moved to Lupane Police Station on the 26th where
Ndlovu was officially charged with communicating "false statements
prejudicial to the State." The police insist that Ndlovu told
villagers at Monday's anti-torture workshops that the "police
torture and assault people." Dube was released without charge.
Our third article
covering legal harassment refers to the previously mentioned murder
of a police inspector by suspected MDC members in Glen View, Harare
on Sunday 29 May. Police launched a violent
crack-down on MDC supporters in the suburb, arresting dozens
of MDC activists and family members at their homes and workplaces
in connection with the murder, despite the lack of evidence incriminating
them. Neither the MDC nor the lawyers representing the detained
have been able to ascertain their location. Police have declined
to comment, but have reported through the state press that MDC-T
members were responsible for the death. The crackdown has since
been on-going, and has spread to other suburbs. At the time of this
report, at least 24 MDC members had been detained, and it is alleged
that those arrested have been beaten and tortured in custody.
We end our report
with an article covering the restriction of freedom of speech. Presidential
security officials prevented a Daily News reporter from covering
a police pass-out parade at Morris Depot in Harare because the paper
'is determined to tarnish Mugabe's image'. He was forcibly removed,
whilst journalists from other media houses were able to attend.
Chiadzwa
families forced to move by brutal soldiers
SW Radio Africa (ZW): 17/05/2011
The remaining
families in the diamond rich Chiadzwa area have been forced to leave
their homes, after soldiers brutally evicted them over the weekend.
A distraught man called the MDC-T offices on Saturday saying the
process was being hurried with properties being destroyed in the
hasty operation. "We are being moved from Chiadzwa right now
. . . Our properties are being destroyed, and we are not even
sure of where we are being moved to," the man said, before
the phone went dead. The remaining 40 families in the area had previously
refused to move until fair compensation had been paid to them. But
the Chinese mining company Anjin, recruited soldiers to start moving
the families on.
- ARTICLE II:
DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE III
: RESTORATION OF ECONOMIC STABILITY AND GROWTH
- ARTICLE VII
: PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE
XI : RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE
XIII : STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
- ARTICLE XVIII
: SECURITY OF PERSONS AND PREVENTION OF VIOLENCE
Cop
killed by suspected MDC-T youths
ZimEye: 29/05/2011
A police officer
was killed in Glen View, Harare on Sunday after suspected MDC-T
youths attacked a ZRP detail investigating reports they were holding
an illegal meeting. ZRP spokesperson, Andrew Phiri, said a member
of the police reaction group died following the skirmishes at Glen
View 3 Shopping Centre. " . . . suspected rowdy MDC-T youths
started attacking the policemen with stones and other objects,"
Phiri told the government-run Herald newspaper. "During the
attack, one of the officers was hit and fell unconscious and was
pronounced dead on arrival at Harare Central Hospital." MDC-T
spokesperson, Douglas Mwonzora suggested the assailants were not
members of his party, but patrons at a bar who had been attacked
by police.
- ARTICLE VII
: PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE XI
: RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
- ARTICLE
XVIII : SECURITY OF PERSONS AND PREVENTION OF VIOLENCE
Cop
killers 'will die by the sword' - Chihuri
NewZimbabwe.com (ZW): 31/05/2011
Police chief
Augustine Chihuri on Tuesday warned MDC-T supporters said to be
behind the killing of a police officer on Sunday that they would
"die by the sword". Inspector Petros Mutedza, was honoured
following his murder by a mob in Harare's Glen View suburb
on Sunday. In a speech read at Inspector Mutedza's funeral
service, Chihuri said the murder had undermined the MDC-T's
public boasts of being a peaceful party. "The Police shall
not, . . . sit . . . while . . . police officers are being
decimated by uncouth opposition political elements in a naïve
and imbecilic attempt to make our country ungovernable," Chihuri
said. "Those who wish to live by the sword must be prepared
to die by the sword."
- ARTICLE II:
DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE VII
: PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE XI
: RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
- ARTICLE XVIII
: SECURITY OF PERSONS AND PREVENTION OF VIOLENCE
No compensation
for displaced Chiadzwa villagers - Minister
ZimEye: 14/05/2011
Mines Minister
Obert Mpofu said the displaced villagers of Chiadzwa will only be
compensated after the international community allows Zimbabwe to
sell its diamonds. "Where do you think we will get the money
to compensate them when the same people who are advocating the ban
of our diamond sales are the same pushing for the government to
compensate villagers? That's idiotic and nonsensical. We will
only get the money to compensate the villagers when our diamonds
are sold freely internationally," Mpofu said at a mining meeting,
accusing the reporter of forwarding of interests. Last year the
government promised to build schools, clinics and other facilities
to the displaced families before awarding mining tenders to a Chinese
company.
- ARTICLE
II: DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE III
: RESTORATION OF ECONOMIC STABILITY AND GROWTH
- ARTICLE
VII : PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE XI
: RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
- ARTICLE XVI
: HUMANITARIAN AND FOOD ASSISTANCE
Mining
companies at war with Gwayi Council over licences
RadioVOP: 22/05/2011
Lupane -
A row has erupted between the Gwayi Sub -Catchment Council
and newly licensed coal -mining companies in Matabeleland
North on how the companies got licences from Ministry of Mines.
The council is accuses two of the companies that were controversially
licensed by the Ministry of Mines to mine coal in the Sinamatela
area, in the wildlife rich Hwange National Park. Makomo Investment
is accused of polluting Lukosi river while the mining activities
of Liberation Mining are said to be threatening the Gwayi-Shangani
dam, which is being built within its vicinity. The Council says
said the extraction of coal in the catchment area should not be
allowed as it undermines national interests.
- ARTICLE
II: DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE
III : RESTORATION OF ECONOMIC STABILITY AND GROWTH
- ARTICLE
VII : PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE
XI : RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
Chisumbanje
villagers in poverty after displacement by Rautenbach
ZimEye: 30/05/2011
Chisumbanje
- Thousands of families are wallowing in abject poverty after
their displacement from their communal lands to pave way for a bio-fuel
project by the Agricultural and Rural Development Authority (ARDA)
and Billy Rautenbach's company Macdom Pvt Ltd. MP Chipinge
South, Meki Makuyana, said the project was fraudulently brought
to the people without local council approval, while traditional
leadership was directed to accept the project as a government initiative.
30 000 acres of land was acquired through displacing families, who
are now without basic essentials such as schools, health facilities
among others. Makuyana said the people in Chisumbanje believed that
it was a government project, while the councilors professed ignorance
about the project.
- ARTICLE
II: DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE III
: RESTORATION OF ECONOMIC STABILITY AND GROWTH
- ARTICLE VII
: PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE XI
: RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
- ARTICLE XVI
: HUMANITARIAN AND FOOD ASSISTANCE
Zim
activists, lawyers & journalists arrested at SADC Summit
SW Radio Africa (ZW): 20/05/2011
A group of civil
society activists, including top lawyers and a journalist, were
on Friday arrested and 'violently ejected' from the
Summit of Southern African Development Community (SADC) leaders
underway in Namibia. Among those picked up by police in Namibia
were Irene Petras from Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, Joy Mabenge
of the Institute for Democratic Alternatives for Zimbabwe (IDAZIM),
and freelance journalist Jealousy Mawarire. The three were being
detained and questioned on Friday evening, while another nine civil
society leaders were being held under heavy police guard. Zimbabwean
CIO agents were leading the interrogations of the activists, along
with Namibian police. The group's vehicle was also impounded
and equipment like cameras was also confiscated.
- ARTICLE II:
DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE VII
: PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE XI
: RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
Missing
ZimRights staff finally found in Lupane
SW Radio Africa (ZW): 26/05/2011
Two ZimRights
employees, Florence Ndlovu and Walter Dube, who have been missing
since their arrest on Monday, were finally located by their lawyers
at a Lupane police station on Thursday. Although police at Nyamandlovu
Police Station had denied holding Ndlovu and Dube in their cells,
the ZimRights employees said they had been held at the police station
since Monday, where they were denied access to their lawyers. The
pair was only moved to Lupane Police Station on Wednesday where
Ndlovu was officially charged with communicating "false statements
prejudicial to the State." The police insist that Ndlovu told
villagers at Monday's anti-torture workshops that the "police
torture and assault people." Dube meanwhile was released without
charge.
- ARTICLE II:
DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE
VII : PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE XI
: RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
Police
wantonly arrest MDC members in Glen View
Zimbabwean, The (ZW): 30/05/2011
Police today
arrested dozens of MDC activists and their families at their homes
and workplaces on allegations of killing a police inspector, who
his colleagues say was murdered by unknown revellers at a liquor
store in Glen View, Harare. Before any investigations had been done
the police rushed to the national press to blame MDC. The resultant
arrests of MDC members are an attempt to justify this unorthodox
behaviour. By late last night, MDC and its lawyers failed to ascertain
the whereabouts of those randomly picked up, ostensibly to facilitate
investigations. The secrecy in which the swoop was done raises suspicion
as neither the party nor the accused's lawyers have been able
to trace those arrested.
- ARTICLE II:
DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE VII
: PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE XI
: RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE XIII
: STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
- ARTICLE
XIX : FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND COMMUNICATION
Mugabe
bars Daily News
Daily News (ZW): 28/05/2011
In yet another
clear anti-Daily News move by the government, President Robert Mugabe's
security officials yesterday barred the popular daily from covering
a police pass-out parade at Morris Depot in Harare where the Zanu-PF
leader was guest of honour. Journalists from other media houses
were allowed to cover the parade. Security details chased away the
Daily News' reporter, arguing that they were taking this uncalled
for measure because the newspaper was out to tarnish Mugabe's
image. The journalist was told in no uncertain terms that the Daily
News was not allowed to cover Mugabe. He was promptly escorted out
of Morris Depot by the spooks, who took details of the journalist's
residential address and national identity number.
- ARTICLE
II: DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT
- ARTICLE
VII : PROMOTION OF EQUALITY, NATIONAL HEALING, COHESION AND UNITY
- ARTICLE
XI : RULE OF LAW, RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND OTHER LAWS
- ARTICLE
XIII : STATE ORGANS AND INSTITUTIONS
- ARTICLE
XVIII : SECURITY OF PERSONS AND PREVENTION OF VIOLENCE
- ARTICLE XIX
: FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND COMMUNICATION
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