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Zimbabwe:
Mass arrests signal new and dangerous phase of repression
AI Index
AFR 46/009/2003 (Public) News Service No: 064
Amnesty International
March 21, 2003
Amnesty International
is deeply concerned by the increasing scale of arbitrary detentions
and for the safety of several hundred people including officials
and supporters of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) taken into custody in Zimbabwe since 18 March 2003. Although
some of those arrested have been released, many remain in detention,
whilst the whereabouts of others remain unknown. At least one person,
Steven Tonera, a farmworker in Manicaland province has been killed,
allegedly as a result of being beaten by state agents.
"What we are
witnessing is much more than the government's usual tactic of raising
the level of violence in the run-up to elections. This is an explosive
situation where there seem to be no limits to how far the government
will go to suppress opposition and maintain its hold on power",
Amnesty International said.
This latest
wave of violence seems a reaction to an MDC-organised stay-away
on 18-19 March and is an attempt by the government and its supporters
to intimidate supporters of the MDC and other government critics
prior to two by-elections due on 29-30 March.
In one incident,
on 18 March, a group of soldiers and state agents beat and tortured
three workers on the farm of Roy Bennet, MDC MP for Chimanimani.
The three men were forced to lie on their stomachs on the ground
and beaten with batons, sjamboks (whips) and pieces of wire. Their
fingers and toes were also broken. As a result of the beatings and
torture, one of the workers Steve Tonera died. The three men were
accused of being MDC supporters and of burning a bus. On 20 March,
a convoy of three trucks carrying up to 60 soldiers of the Zimbabwe
National Army came back to the farm and severely assaulted up to
70 people.
On 19 March
up to 60 MDC activists were arrested in Harare including: Silas
Mangono, MDC MP for Masvingo Central, Giles Mutsekewa, MDC MP for
Mutare North and Austin Mupandawana, MDC MP for Kadoma Central.
Silas Mangono was released on 20 March but Giles Mutsekewa, Austin
Mupandawana and other MDC activists remain in police custody.
On 18 March,
a photographer for the Daily News newspaper, Philimon Bulawayo was
arrested by police while covering a stay-away coordinated by the
MDC in Budiriro, Harare. Gugulethu Moyo a lawyer and Corporate Affairs
Director for Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe was also arrested
when she tried to secure his release from Glen View police station.
At the station, the two were reportedly severely beaten by the wife
of an army commander and a male colleague, while the police stood
by and watched. On 19 March, they were moved to Harare Police Station.
Although they had been severely beaten, they were not allowed access
to medical treatment and were released without charge on 20 March.
"The alarming
escalation in political violence is a clear indication that the
Zimbabwe authorities are determined to suppress dissent by whatever
means necessary, regardless of the terrible consequences. We look
upon the next ten days with fear: the expectation is of further
violent reaction to organised protests by the MDC and civil society"
the organization said.
Amnesty International
is calling on the Zimbabwe authorities to put an immediate end to
the human rights violations and politically motivated violence occurring
in the country, to bring to justice those involved in these abuses
and ensure that the police conduct their duties with complete impartiality.
Background
In
the last month the government has suffered bad publicity over the
hosting of cricket world cup matches and then had its suspension
from the Commonwealth extended. By-elections are scheduled in Kuwadzana
and Highfield, suburbs of the capital Harare, for 29-30 March. Elections
have for the past three years been a focus of suppression of opposition,
even more so as the government seems determined to gain seats in
the urban areas which have been a stronghold of the MDC. On 18-19
March the MDC coordinated a stay-away in the two main cities of
Harare and Bulawayo which seems to have been observed by the vast
majority of workers and businesses. The MDC has since given the
government a deadline of 31 March to meet certain demands or face
'an escalation of protests'.
For more information please call Amnesty International's press office
in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566
Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW
website: http://www.amnesty.org
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
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