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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Doctor
sees Zimbabwe horror up close
The
Los Angeles Times
July 02, 2008
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-doctor2-2008jul02,0,5763890.story?track=rss
Harare - The doctor points
impassively to two X-rays on a screen. One is of a foot fractured
in four places, the breaks more severe than if the victim had been
run over by a car, the doctor says. The second is of a leg fractured
at the thickest part of the tibia, just beneath the knee. The fibula,
a smaller leg bone, is smashed to pieces, says the doctor, who despite
eight years' experience with cases of trauma and beatings has never
seen an injury like the tibia fracture. The leg and foot injuries
were not the only ones suffered by the two victims, a 41-year-old
polling agent for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
party beaten on the soles of his feet and a 46-year-old MDC provincial
secretary struck with a metal bar. Both had two broken arms and
one had broken ribs. The pair are among the thousands of Zimbabwean
activists who were injured in the run-up to Friday's presidential
runoff, overwhelmingly opposition party supporters attacked by Zanu
PF ruling party militias and operatives, according to Human Rights
Watch.
At least 85 opposition
activists were killed before the runoff, which concluded with longtime
incumbent Robert Mugabe being the sole candidate. An additional
200 are missing and presumed dead. And roughly 200,000 people were
displaced from their homes in the violence, the opposition says.
In some areas, the opposition could not field a single polling agent
to monitor the election because of safety concerns. MDC presidential
candidate Morgan Tsvangirai, who described the election campaign
as being like a war, pulled out of the vote because of the severe
violence against MDC activists. Mugabe, 84, who had finished second
to Tsvangirai in the initial presidential vote in March, was inaugurated
Sunday for a new five-year term. The X-rays convey only the bald
medical facts of what happened to two of the many victims, but to
a doctor, the pictures speak as eloquently as courtroom testimony.
The doctor, whose name
has been withheld because of safety concerns and possible repercussions,
describes himself as a man interested in facts, not emotions. He
does focus on the biographical details of the men involved, who
they were and what were their thoughts and feelings. "I just
write the medical reports," he says. "I try to keep it
as objective as possible." What staggers him is the level of
suffering, and the length of time that the victims will continue
to feel the pain. "Every time that person puts his foot down
for the next five years, it will hurt," he says. "You
have four metatarsal fractures," the doctor continues, gesturing
at the bones in the central part of the foot in the first X-ray.
"You just don't get full metatarsal fractures at the same time.
It's very unusual. It requires a huge amount of force. You could
drive a car over someone's foot and if you broke two of them it
would be a lot," he says.
He jabs a finger
at the X-ray of the tibia injury. "Will you look at that bone?
The massive strong part of the tibia has been separated. You just
don't get complete severing of the tibia from the knee like that.
I could not hit someone hard enough to do this. It's an illustration
of unbelievable, intentional brutality," he says. "This
is not over when the election is over." The areas hardest hit
by the violence were traditional Zanu PF strongholds that had swung
strongly to the MDC in the March vote. Zimbabwe
Doctors for Human Rights, a group of independent doctors, reports
that 2,000 people were treated for injuries suffered in political
violence in June and more than 5,000 since February. The doctor
is a member of the organization. "One of the most disturbing
things is that there is nowhere that people can turn to. You have
got no refuge, no ombudsman, no policeman," the doctor says.
He switches off the lighted screen behind the X-rays, takes them
down and slides them into two brown envelopes. There are many others
like them, he says.
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