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The case of Henry Dowa: The United Nations & Zimbabwe under the spotlight
Redress Trust

January 2004

http://www.redress.org/reports/reports

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Introduction

In May 2003 REDRESS learned that an allegedly notorious Zimbabwean police torturer, Henry Dowa, was in Kosovo. Sources inside and outside of Zimbabwe confirmed that there were numerous serious allegations of torture linked to him, and further investigations revealed that Dowa was part of the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) civilian police force (CIVPOL). CIVPOL is made up of several thousand police officers drawn from UN Member States, including Zimbabwe. Early in June 2003 REDRESS dispatched a comprehensive dossier to the head of UNMIK, comprising affidavits from Zimbabwe torture survivors detailing what they had suffered allegedly at Dowa's hands, including electric shock torture and beatings on the bare soles of the feet, supported by medical evidence. The dossier also contained an analysis of current human rights violations in Zimbabwe, especially torture, and demonstrated that it is virtually impossible to bring violators to justice under domestic law under current conditions. Finally, the attention of UNMIK was drawn to the relevant international laws under which it is obliged to act, and in particular the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment or Punishment. In September 2003, the UN asked the Zimbabwe government to withdraw Dowa, which it did. He is now back in Zimbabwe, once again beyond the reach of justice. In this report REDRESS documents the issues arising from the case of Henry Dowa.

Zimbabwe: a country in the grip of political terror

Zimbabwe, formerly the British colony of Rhodesia, achieved independence in April 1980 after two black nationalist liberation movements waged a long and bitter guerrilla war against the illegal white-minority regime of Ian Smith.1 Robert Mugabe, the leader of Zanu-PF, won the first democratic election and has ruled the country for nearly 24 years, first as prime minister and then as president. His main rival was Joshua Nkomo who led the other nationalist movement, PF-Zapu, which Mugabe brutally crushed after independence before absorbing it into his party in 1987.2 Until 1999 the country was a de facto one party state, with Mugabe firmly in command. However, by 1999 a combination of political and economic factors had lead to the formation of a trade unionist based opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), lead by Morgan Tsvangirai. The MDC posed a serious electoral threat to Mugabe's hegemony, illustrated by his government losing a crucial constitutional referendum, intended to entrench his position even further, early in 2000. Very soon after this political defeat the present crisis began when Mugabe unleashed all his forces, firstly against the country's white commercial farmers and then against the MDC, to maintain his grip on power.

Since 2000 Zimbabwe has plunged into chaos, and is today suffering from an economic, political, social, agricultural and human rights disaster. Even before 2000 HIV/AIDS posed a very serious problem, but now the country's difficulties have been hugely exacerbated by rampant inflation and unemployment, and wholesale political repression. The MDC, although nominally legal, is under constant physical attack, and the disruption to food production caused by the confiscation of almost all the commercial farms, combined with drought, has left half the population on the brink of starvation. In this context torture is now endemic. The rule of law has been abandoned, and the independence of the judiciary, particularly at the highest level, has been destroyed.3

Mugabe has a range of forces at his disposal to terrorise the population: so-called 'veterans' from the liberation war (many of them toddlers in 1980), youth militias trained under a new 'national service' programme whose primary function is to attack the MDC, the secret Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), the army, various official Zanu-PF bodies, and the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP). The ZRP, once a largely professional body, has become little more than an extension of Zanu-PF, especially at leadership level. It is now in the forefront of human rights violations, participating directly in the torture of detainees as well as co-operating in this with the more 'traditional' torturers in the CIO. Another aspect which illustrates the ZRP's increasing culpability for the growth of systematic and gross human rights abuses is its blatant failure to investigate and arrest those in and outside of its ranks (especially amongst the war veterans and youth militias) who have committed horrific criminal acts, including political murder, torture and life-threatening assaults.

Today Zimbabwe is a 'rogue' State under the dictatorship of Mugabe and his Zanu-PF henchmen. Until democracy is established there is no reasonable prospect of any of the human rights violators being brought to justice in the country or for the many thousands of human rights victims to receive effective reparations.4

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