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Political
violence report: November 2005 - Overview
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum
January 17, 2006
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Overview
The month of November saw more than 50 Zimbabwe Congress of Trade
Unions (ZCTU) members arrested and detained unlawfully for demonstrating
against the high prices of fuel and other basic commodities and
for the reduction of taxes and cost of living adjustment on 8 November
2005. The members were arrested and taken to Harare Central Police
Station before being taken later to Makoni Police station in army
transport where they were detained for more than the 48 hours stipulated
in the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act. The arrests themselves
were in clear violation of the rights to freedom of expression,
association and movement. The conditions of detention to which the
victims were subjected were also well below the conditions stipulated
in the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of
Prisoners, which was adopted on 30 August 1955, by the First United
Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and Treatment of Offenders.
The victims were overcrowded in unhealthy conditions and those that
were on TB treatment and on Anti Retrovirals (ARVs) were denied
access to their treatment. A 6 month old baby was detained along
with her mother in an overcrowded cell. The Human Rights Forum deplores
the inhuman and degrading conditions of detention to which the victims
were held at Makoni Police Station and urges the Government to improve
conditions of detention at all Police Stations or simply declare
the cells inhabitable for those arrested.
On 5 November,
more than 18 NCA activists were arrested for demonstrating for a
new constitution and against the Senate Elections. The Human Rights
Forum urges the Government to respect the rights of Zimbabweans
to freedom of expression, association and movement. The Senate Elections,
which were held on 26 November 2005, saw the continued intolerance
pervading the Zimbabwean political spectrum. In Hatfield and Tafara-Mabvuku
constituencies, there were reports that people were being assaulted
on allegations that they were influencing others not to take part
in the elections. The Forum urges the Zimbabwean electorate to respect
the rights of each individual to form and express opinions.
The Human Rights
Forum also stands in solidarity with the organizations that were
commemorating the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence from
16 November 2005.
Totals: 1
November - 30 November 2005 
Cumulative
totals: 1 January - 30 November 2005
The cumulative
graph should be read along with the table depicting the monthly
totals of violations from 1 January 2005 to 30 November 2005. The
total quantifiable number of victims reported in November 2005 is
88.
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