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Student
leaders handed over to torture squad
Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU)
August 06, 2009
President of the Zimbabwe
National Students Union, Clever Bere, has been handed over to the
dreaded Zimbabwe police's Criminal Investigation Department (CID)
Law and Order unit after being transferred from Avondale Police
Station this afternoon. This unit is notorious for torturing and
disappearing thousands of democracy activists, including most recently
the torture of civic leader Jestina Mukoko.
The ZINASU President
was arrested
on the 5th of August 2009 together with other students during a
students meeting at University
of Zimbabwe. The meeting was held to address student concerns
over issues of exorbitant tuition fees being levied on students,
the disrupted academic calendar and, government support for students.
Majority of students at the institution are from poor families and
largely drawn from outside Harare, where the university is located.
With hostels closed, and the university insisting on an upfront
payment of tuition before enrolment, many students are likely to
be deprived an opportunity to learn. The university fee structure
is absurd with the lowest amount being asked for by the authorities
is about US$404 for students studying in the Humanities Faculty.
The university has been
closed for a year due to dilapidated water and sewerage infrastructure,
crippling exodus of qualified teaching staff and lack of resources
to kick start the new semester. Standards are now a far cry from
what they used to be.
The government has embarked
on a systematic and deliberate policy to banish students from accessing
tertiary education in Zimbabwe. This is a direct policy of making
education a preserve for the rich at the expense of the daughter
and son of the common worker and peasant
Of the 14 initially
arrested, only Bere and three others remain detained. The four are
being charged under section 37 of the Criminal
Codification Act for . . . ''participating in a
gathering with intent to promote breach of peace or bigotry.''
Though some sources are indicating that the four might be taken
to court tomorrow we are not sure if that will happen. This pattern
is in line with previous experiences of punitive detention of democracy
activist where torture will be used as a punishment for political
deviance.
These violations are
a clear affront to freedom of association, expression, conscience
and a violation of Bere and other detainees' dignity. These
arrests are happening a few days after the three days of Dedication
to National Reconciliation and in a period of 'constitution making'
poses frightening questions. How can reconciliation and freedom
be guaranteed when the onslaught against public, peaces gathering
of unarmed citizens are disrupted and leaders are thrown into torture
chambers?
The meeting sort dialogue
and an honest conversation by students who are a stakeholder in
the education system on how to contribute to the goal of ensuring
that the university as a public institution is able to contribute
to the country's skills bank.
What is very much worrying
to us is that this government has turned a blind eye on our education.
It's quite sad that Ministers pride in latest Mercs, Cherokees,
and some of them have now become permanent residence at flamboyant
and FIVE Star Hotels namely Meikles, Crowne Plaza etc, and their
children learning in South Africa, Australia and Europe at the expense
of the toiling masses of Zimbabwe. What extravagance and outright
hypocrisy for the government to refuse to fund education.
Lastly, we call for the
immediate release of President Bere and his colleagues, and we call
upon all pro democratic Zimbabweans to insist on the release of
the student activists and to pressure the Zimbabwe government to
guarantee that the detained will not be tortured.
We encourage the government
of Zimbabwe to promote, instead of stifle, basic human liberties.
Visit the ZINASU
fact
sheet
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