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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
ZESN
continues to receive distressing reports on observers' attacks
Zimbabwe
Election Support Network
May 23, 2008
The Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN) continues to receive distressing
reports on observers being attacked.
As the retribution attacks
continue throughout the country with disturbing reports of alleged
abductions, torture and subsequent murders of political activists
since the announcement of the Presidential results, ZESN is alarmed
with the continued attacks targeted at domestic observers a few
weeks before the critical second election pencilled for the 27th
of June 2008.
Some ZESN observers have
received threats, physical attacks, homes have been burnt, property
destroyed, crops burnt and some have been denied medication after
severe attacks.
On 21 May 2008, ZESN
received three worrying cases of its observers having been severely
tortured at the hands of known ZANU PF militia in Mt Darwin East,
Mutyandaedza village, after which they were transported to Mt Darwin
District Hospital for medication, only to be denied proper care
and attention.
The three, two men and
an elderly woman all ZESN observers suffered fractured arms, fractured
fingers, deep cuts and bruises from severe beatings. Such inhuman
and degrading treatment by well known ZANU PF youths in the area
is a mockery to calls for peace and calm ahead of the runoff by
the leaders of ZANU PF and the police.
Furthermore, displaced
ZESN observers who had been accommodated at a safe house in Harare
were raided and dumped at Mbare bus terminus on the 20th of May
2008 by the police. These observers from Muzarabani, Mt Darwin,
Shamva and Mudzi had ran away from their homes following threats,
harassments and arson attacks on their properties.
In Mutoko South, the
family of a ZESN staff member was harassed and beaten by suspected
ZANU PF youths in the area for their association with a member of
an election observation group.
ZESN appeals to the police,
political parties and traditional leaders to educate and tell their
structures to stop political violence.
Visit the ZESN
fact
sheet
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