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Students
remanded in custody for 16 days
Students Solidarity Trust
May 12, 2006
In the midst
of Bindura, on the way to Chipadze Township – stands an outstanding
billboard, with a menacing figure spotting it. Inscribed on the
billboard is a message that sends shivers to any passer by – *Zanu
PF chete muBindura (in proper speak: Welcome to ZANU PF hinterland).*
It is a permanent feature of Zanu PF’s political commissar and Bindura
Member of Parliament, Elliot Manyika.
At the Kimberly
Reef Hotel, a threatening group of Zanu PF youths sit idle in the
Cocopan cocktail bar. The hotel is just opposite the Bindura magistrates’
courts. Early in the morning, they had staged a demonstration outside
the courts, clamoring for the continued incarceration of students
from Bindura University. The ZANU PF lambent youths had earlier
on, threatened lawyers representing students, warning them never
to set foot in Bindura again, or to do so at their own peril. Alec
Muchadehama and Andrew Makoni are representing the students – they
had to flee from the cauldron of Bindura!
Zimbabwe’s Minister
without Portfolio, Zanu PF’s political commissar and controversially
elected Member of Parliament for Bindura, Elliot Manyika, is reported
to have given a directive that the students should not be released
and threatened the Magistrate with unspecified action if that directive
was not followed. Sources hold that the Magistrate was later heard
bragging in the Cocopan cocktail bar that the students would be
released over his dead body.
The students
at the Bindura University of Science and Technology staged a peaceful
demonstration at the campus, demanding a reversal of the anti-students
and ill-advised fees structure, which is beyond the reach of ordinary
students. 19 students were arrested at the campus on Monday, and
additional 29 students have been detained, amongst them the remaining
members of the Students Representative Council.
The students,
who include the newly elected ZINASU
Secretary General from Bulawayo’s National University of Science
and Technology, Beloved Chiweshe, have been remanded in custody
to the 26^th of May 2006! A move that is unprecedented in the history
of the students’ movement in Zimbabwe. Beloved, who was clearly
tortured, is said to have been kept in solitary confinement. A visibly
shaken, but hardly recognizable Beloved, stationed in the dock,
is in dire need of medical attention, which he is being denied access
to, even after court officials were told that it would not be at
the state’s expense.
At the main
campus in Bindura – a tension filled atmosphere grips the University.
At the entrance is a nerve-racking group of AK47 wielding riot police.
Business in the campus is at a standstill, with the University still
coming to terms with the explosion that rocked the faculty of commerce
department – by unknown assailants. It is a rubble!
On the road
to Mt. Darwin is the University’s residential campus – which resembles
a war zone. Riot police put all the students under 24hours surveillance,
tantamount to a house arrest. A group of students, weary faced,
sit on the rugged terrain, surrounded by a swathe of riot police
– they are uncompromising.
These sad developments
are coupled by other acts of politically motivated student victimizations
at other tertiary intuitions. The sad developments ride on the back
of the ZINASU congress, which took place from the 3^rd to the 5^th
of May, where it was resolved that students would reject the unbecoming
new fees structures, as it was an affront not only to academic freedoms,
but also the sacrosanct right to education.
In the past
week alone, 4 student leaders and Activists have been suspended
from Masvingo State University, 7 from the University of Zimbabwe,
and the arrest of 48 students leaders who were delegates to the
ZINASU congress, including the Coordinator of ZINASU, Washington
Katema, SST Program Officer Simbarashe Moyo, and Information liaison
Committee member Charlse Mutengwa, over a damaged Mugabe portrait.
The Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU), and the Students Solidarity Trust
(SST), calls upon the head of state, Robert Gabriel Mugabe, and
the Minister of Home Affairs Kembo Mohadi, to use their authority
to persuade the police to rescind from harassing, torturing, and
wantonly violating the fundamental human rights and arresting students,
who are merely trying to affirm their right to education through
peaceful protest. The ZINASU and SST further calls upon, Robert
Gabriel Mugabe, in his capacity as the Chancellor of state universities,
and Stanslius Gorerazvo Mudenge, the minister of Higher and Tertiary
Education, to recant the new fees structure, as it is clear unsustainable,
and an unnecessary assault on the right to education.
Visit
the Students Solidarity Trust fact
sheet
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