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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
Organised Violence and Torture in the June 2000 General Election in Zimbabwe
Amani Trust
February 28, 2002
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Introduction
This monograph focuses
on the gross human rights abuses during the period preceding the June
2000 Parliamentary elections. This election marked the first time a strong
opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), had challenged
the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (Zanu (PF))
in the political arena. In the General Election the MDC won 57 out of
120 contested seats but the price paid for these democratic gains was
high. This was perhaps the most violent election in Zimbabwe's history,
with killings, wide scale torture, threats and intimidation and property
damage around the country. The organised violence and torture continued
through the various bye-elections held in 2000 and 2001.
Following the General
Election, the MDC brought legal challenges to the High Court of Zimbabwe
in 38 constituencies in an effort to contest the election results in those
areas. They alleged that the violence perpetrated by Zanu (PF) agents,
with the knowledge or active participation of the Zanu (PF) candidate
at the time, unfairly affected the outcome of the vote in these constituencies,
and thereby violated the Electoral Act of Zimbabwe. The MDC asked in their
petitions that the results be overturned, and that elections be held again
in these 38 constituencies. The MDC additionally requested that, if any
member of parliament was found guilty of election misconduct, that member
be rendered ineligible to run for public office for five years.
The trial of 39 cases (Zanu (PF) submitted one case as the petitioner)
began in February 2001, and, by December 2001, 15 petitions had been heard
by a High Court Judge, and eight cases cancelled or withdrawn. First hand
testimony was documented from all the election petition cases that were
heard in the High Court of Zimbabwe from February to October 2001. A majority
of data included in this chapter is based on the testimony from the 15
completed election petitions. Certain testimonies might additionally include
excerpts from medical assessments that were performed by medical staff
that had expertise with trauma victims.
The testimony of witnesses
throughout these constituencies illustrates a clearly emerging pattern.
Witnesses most commonly experienced torture, threats and intimidation.
The similarity of experiences from across the country cannot be construed
as accidental. The violence that characterized these constituencies for
months cannot be classified as a random expression of rage, either. These
violent acts were strategic, occurred over a long period of time, and
were perpetrated, supported and sanctioned by the government and its agents.
The fact that the
election petitions were heard in the High Court is historic. Testimony
about gross human rights violations is uncommon in the Zimbabwean courts,
and even less common are testimonies about gross human rights violations
in respect of election irregularities. For this reason, the AMANI Trust,
together with the Legal Resources Foundation, felt obliged to use this
opportunity to support the victims in their attempts to make public their
experiences, as well as to use the opportunity to validate the many allegations
of torture in the legal arena. This position was also supported by the
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum.
For the MDC, the election
petitions had three main goals. Firstly, to ensure that the stories of
the victims were heard by the nation; the intention here was to ensure
that the historical record was made complete. Secondly, the court hearings
would combat the prevailing climate of impunity in Zimbabwe. That the
Government was discomforted by the possible implications of the election
petitions and the supporting testimonies was evident from both the passing
of a Presidential Pardon in October 2000, as well as the attempt to vitiate
the petitions by an amendment to the Electoral Act by the President using
Presidential Powers in December 2000. This latter effort was thrown out
by the Supreme Court, but the amnesty stayed and prevented the prosecution
of many perpetrators under the criminal law. Such prosecutions would have
had a very important consequence for the election petitions. Thirdly,
there was the hope that the results might be overturned by the Courts,
and, since such verdicts would justify the claims of an unfair election,
to allow the voters the opportunity to elect the member of Parliament
of their choice free from fear or irregularity.
This monograph is
based on detailed observation of the election petitions held in the High
Court of Zimbabwe, as well as testimonies available from victims seen
during the General Election and the subsequent bye-elections. A team of
researchers attended all the court hearings, making notes of all proceedings,
as well as studying the case notes held by the AMANI Trust and the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum. There is a companion monograph on the court hearings
themselves, and both monographs, together with additional material, will
shortly be consolidated into a book. As will be seen, the report corroborates
many of the earlier reports of the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum , as
well as the reports of international human rights organisations.
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