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Mugabe
Henchmen on the Warpath
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa
Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 10, 25-Feb-05)
By Dzikamayi Chiyausiku in Rusape
February 25, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_010_1_eng.txt
ZANU
PF youth militias and activists launch campaign of beatings and
threats.
Violence and
massive intimidation are wreaking havoc in Zimbabwe's rural areas
as the ruling party's and opposition's campaigns gather momentum
ahead of Zimbabwe's fifth parliamentary election on March 31.
ZANU PF youth militias,
President Robert Mugabe's much feared stormtroopers, known among
the population as the Green Bombers, are currently behaving with
such menace in the Makoni West constituency that many villagers
have fled their homes.
Makoni West is a marginal
constituency on the outskirts of Rusape, 135 kilometres southeast
of Harare. The sitting ZANU PF MP has been replaced by Zimbabwe's
highly unpopular Minister of Agriculture Joseph Made, who is opposed
by Remus Makuwaza, for the main opposition party, the Movement for
Democratic Change, MDC, and Tendai Chekera of the small regional
party ZANU-Ndonga.
Villagers also allege
they have been threatened with eviction from their recently acquired
farms - taken over in Mugabe's move against white commercial farmer
- if they do not vote for ruling party.
Matthew Ngoroma, 38,
told IWPR that he fled his home after "some people told me
I would pay the price for supporting MDC". He said four men
in Zanu PF campaign shirts visited him three weeks ago and threatened
to burn down his house. "They said they would torch my house
if I continued selling MDC cards," said Ngoroma, who has moved
his family to a place near Rusape town. "I am not alone. There
are others who have been beaten, threatened and intimidated. It's
a terror campaign."
Other villagers perceived
to be MDC supporters have been denied food aid, fertiliser and maize
seed being distributed by government officials loyal to ZANU PF.
"You have to be
a Zanu PF supporter to get fertiliser, seed and food," said
another villager, Susan Rugoyi. "We have to show Zanu PF cards
in order to get a pack of maize meal being distributed by Zanu PF
officials as food aid."
The chiefs and village
heads have also been roped into Zanu PF campaign teams. Villagers
said the chiefs are forcing their subjects to attend Zanu PF rallies.
Meanwhile, the chiefs are banning opposition rallies in their areas
while threatening to evict opposition supporters.
"We do have several
cases of political violence that we are investigating," said
a senior police officer who declined to be named. "But it would
be unfair to say categorically say that these violent incidents
are being perpetrated by Zanu PF. What if they are just rogue elements
abusing Zanu PF regalia?"
The violence is not just
isolated incidents. It is on a national scale. Fifty soldiers assaulted
three MDC candidates returning from the launch of the party's election
campaign in Masvingo in the southeast on February 20. MDC spokesman
Paul Themba Nyathi said, "The soldiers first assaulted Gabriel
Chiwara, our candidate for Makoni West, and his election candidate,
Josphat Munhumumwe, accusing them of selling the country to the
British.
"They were kicked
and punched and sustained injuries all over their bodies. They were
taken to hospital for treatment and later released. The assault
was reported to the police, but no arrests have been made."
Nyathi said the MDC was
particularly concerned about this assault because it repeated a
pattern of army violence against the opposition in places many hundreds
of kilometres apart. MDC candidate for Mutare West, Gabriel Chiwara,
who is trying to topple Transport Minister Christopher Mushohwe
in a constituency 250 km southeast of Harare, was assaulted by soldiers
together with his campaign manager.
Reports are also coming
in of violence by soldiers, Green Bombers and ZANU PF activists
against MDC candidates in the south of the country in Gwanda and
Beitbridge constituencies.
In Norton, 40 km west
of Harare, a stronghold of ZANU PF MP Sabina Mugabe, the president's
sister, ruling party supporters waylaid and severely beat an eleven-strong
MDC campaign team who were putting up party posters. The posters
and party regalia the MDC activists were wearing were confiscated
and burned.
Hilda Mafudze, the MDC
candidate for Manyame constituency, neighbouring Norton, said, "This
cannot be a free and fair election. How can the whole process be
fair when one's campaign team is beaten up and their regalia burnt
by these thugs who belong to a party which claims it supports a
free and fair election?"
Wellington Chibebe, secretary-general
of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, said, "We want to
state very clearly that as much as the politicians are saying the
elections will be violence-free, the reality on the ground is that
ordinary men, women and children are going to be subject to untold
violence."
Reginald Matchaba-Hove,
chairman of the Zimbabwe Election Support Network, ZESN, a group
of 40 civic organisations supporting democratic elections, said,
"For many opposition supporters, fear of violence means they
would rather not go to vote than vote and face the recriminations.
"The penalty for
voting for the opposition can be expulsion from the village, physical
violence, withdrawal from the local food aid registers, or all of
them combined. Past experience has taught them that such threats
are eventually carried out, and they fear a repeat of 2000 and 2002
[legislative and presidential elections marred by widespread violence
and intimidation]."
Rural areas in Zimbabwe's
majority ethnic Shona regions have traditionally voted ZANU PF,
with the chiefs, who maintain government food registers, beneficiaries
and loyal supporters of the ruling party. According to southern
Africa's Famine Early Warning System Network, five million Zimbabweans,
nearly half the population, are in need of food aid.
President Mugabe, in
an interview on ZANU PF-controlled state television, said he wanted
this election campaign to be peaceful. His interior minister, Kembo
Mohadi, said organisations alleging violence and human rights abuses
were "subversives who are western-funded".
Responding to
the allegations that chiefs are forcing their people to attend ZANU
PF rallies and vote for Mugabe's party, Mohadi said, "Ours
is a peaceful party. Our people hold their chiefs in high regard
and, naturally, get worried when such accusations are made against
them. We cannot deny our people the right to choose their own leaders
when we fought so hard [in the 1970s liberation war] to bring them
human rights, freedom and social justice."
Inspector Wayne Bvudzijena,
Zimbabwe's national police spokesman, said the national force had
not received any reports of violence or intimidation by political
parties. "I am surprised to hear these reports," he said.
"But I can assure you that the campaign remains peaceful."
Dzikamayi
Chiyausiku is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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