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"You
Will Be Thoroughly Beaten" - The Brutal Suppression of Dissent
in Zimbabwe
Human Rights Watch
Volume 18, No. 10(A)
November, 2006
http://hrw.org/reports/2006/zimbabwe1106/
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Summary
We
cannot have a situation where people decide to sit in places not
allowed and when police remove them they say no. We can’t have that.
That is a revolt to the system. Some are crying that they were beaten.
Yes you will be thoroughly beaten. When the police say move you
move. If you don’t move, you invite the police to use force —President
Robert Mugabe, addressing delegates at the Zimbabwe embassy in Cairo,
Egypt, on the arrest, torture and mistreatment of 15 trade union
activists in Zimbabwe, September 23, 2006
Violent repression
of civil society activists by state authorities in Zimbabwe continues
to escalate. Over the past year the government has reacted to a
spate of nationwide protests against its policies on social, economic,
and human rights conditions in the country by intensifying its efforts
to intimidate, silence, and punish those who expose abuses and exercise
their basic rights.
In the beginning
of Zimbabwe’s political crisis, the main perpetrators of violence
and intimidation against opposition supporters and civil society
activists were war veterans, youth militia, and supporters of the
ruling party. In the past three years human rights violations against
opposition supporters and civil society activists have increasingly
been carried out by uniformed army and police personnel and state
security agents. The government has taken no clear action to halt
the rising incidence of torture and ill-treatment of activists while
in the custody of police or the intelligence services. Recent statements
by President Mugabe appear to condone acts of torture and other
serious human rights violations.
This report
highlights the repressive tactics that the government has used in
the past year to suppress the increasing political and economic
discontent among the population. The police have arbitrarily arrested
hundreds of civil society activists during routine meetings or peaceful
demonstrations, often with excessive force, and in some cases subjected
those in custody to severe beatings that amounted to torture, and
other mistreatment.
Those who try
to expose and seek legal redress for such abuses, in particular
human rights lawyers and activists, are themselves subjected to
intimidation and harassment by the police and intelligence officers.
These acts of intimidation and harassment take many forms, including
attacks in the state media by officials, public statements by ministers
vilifying the work of civil society organizations; and threatening
phone calls and death threats made by unknown persons purporting
to speak on behalf of the government.
The authorities
in Zimbabwe rarely investigate allegations of torture and other
mistreatment. None of the allegations of violence, torture and mistreatment
documented in this report have been investigated (although one investigation
has been ordered by a judge). President Mugabe’s statements endorsing
abusive law enforcement measures can but contribute to entrenching
the culture of impunity that currently exists in Zimbabwe.
The Government
of Zimbabwe has an obligation to act now and uphold respect for
basic freedoms and human rights in Zimbabwe. Human Rights Watch
calls on the Zimbabwean authorities to end the use of arbitrary
arrests and unlawful detentions; end the use of excessive force
by the police; and immediately investigate all allegations of torture
and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. Those found responsible
for such acts should be brought to justice. Adequate redress should
be provided for the victims of rights abuses.
This report
is based on a Human Rights Watch research mission to Harare, Zimbabwe,
in September-October 2006. Human Rights Watch interviewed 35 persons
including victims of and witnesses to human rights violations, medical
experts who treated the victims, lawyers who represented the victims,
human rights activists, members of local civil society organizations,
student activists, and foreign diplomats. The names of some individuals
have been omitted for reasons of security.
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