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Zimbabwe:
Another death at Porta Farm - 11 people now dead following police
misuse of tear gas
Amnesty
International
AI Index: AFR 46/028/2004 (Public)
News Service No: 244
September
22, 2004
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR460282004?open&of=ENG-ZWE
As the death
toll rises at Porta Farm following police misuse of tear gas during
an attempt to forcibly evict residents, Amnesty International is
repeating its call for an immediate, full and independent inquiry
into the actions of the police and the subsequent deaths. Of the
11 people known to have died so far, five are children under the
age of one.
On 22 September Amnesty International reported that 10 people had
died at Porta Farm, following exposure to tear gas. Relatives of
the 10 deceased have confirmed this information to Amnesty International
in sworn affidavits.
An eleventh person, Angeline Nhamoinesu, aged 46, has since died.
Her relatives report that she also became sick after being exposed
to tear gas on 2 September 2004. They have requested a post-mortem.
All 11 deaths
were reported to Norton Police Station or to a Police Post based
at Porta Farm by relatives of the deceased. In accordance with Zimbabwe
law, relatives obtained permission from the police before they buried
their dead.
According to
Zimbabwean and South African media, the Zimbabwe Republic Police
have denied that any Porta Farm residents died following the events
of 2 September. Amnesty International, with the permission of relatives,
is naming the deceased.
They are: Fungai
Livson's one-day-old son (he had not been given a name); Ronald
Job Daniel (5 months); Matilda Matsheza, (5 months); Yolanda Rungano
(5 months); Monalisa Banda (7 months); Kuyeka Phiri (aged 30); Viola
Mupetsi (aged 30); Julia Nheredzo (aged 32); Raphael Chatima (aged
40) and Vasco John (aged 65).
"The Government
of Zimbabwe must ensure that police behaviour at Porta Farm on 2
September 2004, including the use of tear gas by police officers
and the 11 deaths which followed, are rigorously investigated, and
the results of the investigation made public," Amnesty International
said. "Any police officer responsible for breaches of police
procedures and violation of human rights must be brought to justice."
Since making
its first public statement on the situation at Porta Farm, Amnesty
International has received information alleging that residents are
being subjected to intimidation by members of the Zimbabwe Republic
Police.
"The Zimbabwean
authorities should ensure that such intimidation ceases immediately
and that the allegations are fully investigated. Residents of Porta
Farm must receive the full protection of the law," Amnesty
International said.
Background
On 2 September 2004, riot police, war veterans and members of the
youth "militia" reportedly went to Porta Farm to forcibly
evict some 10,000 people, many of whom have been living there since
1991. The police were acting in defiance of a court order prohibiting
the eviction. According to eye-witness testimony the police fired
tear gas directly into the homes of the Porta Farm residents.
Doctors who
examined some of the Porta Farm residents following the events of
2 September believe that those most seriously affected by the tear
gas were particularly vulnerable due to pre-existing illnesses such
as tuberculosis.
On 22 September
2004 Amnesty International expressed grave concern about the police
action at Porta Farm, and the deaths which followed. Since then,
a spokesman for the Zimbabwe Republic Police has been quoted in
the Zimbabwe Independent on Friday 24 September, and in the South
African newspaper Business Day (Johannesburg) on 28 September saying
the Zimbabwe Republic Police are unaware of the deaths at Porta
Farm.
Public
Document
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. web: http://www.amnesty.org
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