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Peaceful protest and police torture in the City of Bulawayo: 24 February
to 25 March 2003
Solidarity Peace
Trust
April 17, 2003
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Johannesburg - Previous
reports compiled by the same authors in conjunction with Physicians For
Human Rights Denmark (PHR-DK), detailed cases of torture in the western
part of Zimbabwe in January, May and November 2002. In these three reports,
war veterans and militia were identified as the main perpetrators of violence,
although cases of police torture were recorded.
The previous PHR-DK
reports showed a link between election campaigns in Zimbabwe and state
organised violence. In 2002, an increase in politically motivated violence
coincided with the Presidential election, Parliamentary by-elections and
the Rural District Council elections.
Scope of the report
It should be noted that the current report documents violence only in
the City of Bulawayo, and only those cases brought to the attention of
the health professionals who authored the report. State organised violence
occurred on a massive scale in many parts of Zimbabwe during the month
of March 2003. The current report should therefore be considered as an
indicator of recent trends in organised violence in one region of the
country, and not as a comprehensive document.
We document in this
report that mutilating torture beyond any doubt is practised by government
supporters against their political opponents in Zimbabwe in 2003.
The fact that perpetrators
do not care whether they torture people who can identify them, or whether
their acts of torture or ill treatment leave marks that can easily be
recognised as caused by torture, underlines a clear assumption on their
part of impunity. This assumption appears well founded: no prosecutions
against perpetrators have been made in any of the cases of torture and
ill treatment that we documented, and this points to a deliberate policy
by the authorities.
The report reflects
new trends in relation to violence in Zimbabwe.
Every case reported
to human rights health professionals in Bulawayo in the last month implicated
the police as perpetrators of the alleged torture.
Furthermore, every
case of abuse took place in the context of peaceful public protest.
Approximately 30%
of the victims in this report are women, indicating a growing willingness
on the part of the authorities to torture women.
This may reflect a
growing willingness on the part of ordinary Zimbabweans, in particular
women, to take part in such protests, and more blatant attempts by the
state to prevent peaceful protest.
World Cricket Cup
and the right to peaceful protest
The current report establishes beyond any doubt that the Zimbabwean government
and the Zimbabwe Republic Police did not allow peaceful protest by those
citizens of Zimbabwe who felt that there should be no normal sport in
an abnormal society. The current authors are aware of 15 detentions in
relation to the first WCC match in Bulawayo, of 42 detentions at the second
and of 23 detentions at the third. All those detained have reported torture
or severe ill treatment.
Furthermore, detentions
and torture took place during other peaceful protests during the February
and March, and not only in relation to the cricket.
The increase in police
torture is a cause for deep concern. The failure of the Zimbabwean authorities
to tolerate peaceful protest, whether in the form of public protest or
mass stay aways is alarming. It is the conclusion of the authors that
state repression is worsening and becoming more blatant. It is our prediction
that the human rights situation in Zimbabwe will deteriorate further in
the next three months.
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