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Political
violence surges after Mugabe assumes presidency
IRIN News
July
09, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79159
The already
high levels of politically motivated violence in Zimbabwe's rural
areas are escalating, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
told IRIN.
Violence surged in the
aftermath of the 29 March elections, in which ZANU-PF lost it majority
in parliament for the first time since independence from Britain
in 1980, and its leader, Robert Mugabe, come off second best to
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai in the presidential ballot. It continued
in the lead-up to the second round of presidential voting on 27
June.
The presidential run-off
ballot was deemed necessary after neither presidential candidate
managed to achieve the 50 percent plus one vote required for an
outright win.
In the interregnum between
the 29 March and 27 June polls, there were reports of widespread
violence, torture and internal displacement, which, according to
the MDC, resulted in the deaths of more than 80 of their supporters
and led to Tsvangirai's decision to withdraw his candidacy.
Mugabe, who has ruled
for 28 years, claimed a landslide victory in the second round.
Rape
as a weapon
Pishai
Muchauraya, the MDC spokesperson for the country's eastern province
of Manicaland and newly elected parliamentarian for Makoni South,
told IRIN the violence intensified after Mugabe was sworn in as
president two days after the vote, on the eve of the African Union
summit in Egypt.
"The torture camps
are still in place, and since the beginning of July three supporters
of the MDC have been murdered by ZANU-PF militia and war veterans
at the torture camps. Several women, including a 70-year-old grandmother
and a 15-year-old girl, have been gang-raped, while beatings and
displacements continue. People are being forced to donate goats,
cattle and women to the bases to avoid being victims."
Rape was being used as
a "deplorable" weapon against those perceived as not supporting
ZANU-PF, and "In many instances, the victims cannot remember
the number of people who raped them but it is usually more than
20, and that increases the chances of infecting the victims with
HIV/AIDS," Muchauraya said.
"The perpetrators
... also expose themselves to infection, which could have a significant
impact on reversing the impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic."
Muchauraya said "the
siege" by government supporters was an attempt to change the
political culture and thinking in rural areas, and that rather than
being dismantled, "more torture camps are being established."
During the independence
war against white rule, the rural areas were the bastion of support
for Zimbabwe's guerrilla armies, and the rural vote against the
ruling ZANU-PF in the recent elections was seen as an insult by
the country's ruling elite, according to political analysts.
"The international
community has rejected the 27 June circus, in which Robert Mugabe
contested against himself and declared himself the winner. ZANU-PF
is subjugating everybody, so that if another election is called,
and even if it was free and fair, people would vote for ZANU-PF
out of fear," Muchauraya said.
Social welfare minister
Nicholas Goche told IRIN the upsurge in violence was a consequence
of the MDC attacking their own supporters in a bid to create sympathy
among the international community.
"The MDC stage-managed
these developments in order to coincide with the G8 summit [in Japan]
so that Zimbabwe is put on the agenda. The idea is to give the impression
that there is increasing political violence and that people are
still being beaten, but all that is false."
In reaction to Goche's
comment, MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa told IRIN: "As the MDC,
we are deeply concerned by the upsurge in political violence, especially
in the countryside. We are overwhelmed by the number of internally
displaced persons who continue to flock to our offices.
"War veterans and
ZANU-PF militia are behind these attacks. We have information that
the torture chambers have not been dismantled and that new ones
are being set up," he said.
Apparatus
of violence
A
"demobilised" member of ZANU-PF's youth militia, who declined
to be identified, told IRIN that only the militia bases in urban
areas were being dismantled.
"Some of my colleagues
have relocated to rural areas to set up new bases or join existing
ones. They have launched Operation Makazviitirei [Operation Why
Did You Ever Vote for the MDC]," he said. This operation has
been running since ZANU-PF lost the general elections on 29 March.
"On the eve of voting
[in the presidential runoff on 27 June] we mobilised all the people
to spend the night at an all-night vigil, so that they would go
straight from the base to the polling station. Our base commander,
a serving soldier who is a war veteran, was in charge, and the same
appeared to be the case with other bases.
"Unfortunately,
the lines of communication are so vague that some of my colleagues,
who had not been officially told to stop mobilising the people [in
urban areas], have been severely beaten up by the police and army
for political violence," he said.
The ruling party had
ordered that political violence cease in urban areas, as it was
difficult to hide such activities and exposed ZANU-PF to international
criticism, the youth militia member said.
ZANU-PF has mobilised
the three main pillars of the party: the Youth League, which also
contains the Youth Brigade; the Women's League; and its Main Wing,
comprised mainly of male ZANU-PF members.
The Youth Brigade has
been wearing uniforms since the 1980s, but in 2000, after Mugabe
launched the fast-track land reform programme to redistribute white
commercial farmland to landless blacks, ZANU-PF established a National
Youth Service. Its graduates - also known as the Green Bombers because
they dress in green fatigues - combined with the Youth Brigade and
are collectively called the ZANU-PF youth militia.
The militia recruits
youth from the ranks of both the urban and rural unemployed and
though they do not receive payment, they use their positions to
force people to supply them with food and drink.
These young people fight
against opposition activists and were responsible for rounding up
and frog-marching people to "re-education and re-orientation
bases", known as torture camps by the MDC, the youth militia
member told IRIN.
He said youth militia
were never accepted into the party hierarchy, as these positions
were the preserve of "old men and women".
The militia bases were
usually established in schools or clinics and were under the overall
command of veterans of Zimbabwe's liberation war, or serving members
of the army or security services, he said.
The youth militia member
said all-night vigils were held, during which those brought to the
bases were made to sing liberation songs and chant praises to Mugabe,
and to publicly "confess" to being opposition members
and then denounce the MDC.
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