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ZIMBABWE:
Government accused of persistent human rights abuses
Moyiga
Nduru, Inter Press Service (IPS)
November
01, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=35328
JOHANNESBURG
- "I was arrested a dozen times," notes Tapera Kapuya, a student
leader at the University
of Zimbabwe between 2001 and 2002, who says he was the target
of both police and the Southern African country's intelligence agents.
"In November
2001 I was abducted from my room in the university by state agents
and tortured for three days," he told IPS in South Africa, where
he lives in exile.
Kapuya is now
helping Zimbabwe's National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA), a pressure group based in the
capital, Harare, to set up an office in the South African commercial
hub of Johannesburg.
"The situation
in Zimbabwe hasn't improved. It's deteriorating," he said. "And
the NCA leadership is finding it difficult to work because of state
repression. The office in Johannesburg will highlight the abuses
in Zimbabwe and mobilise the 2.5 million Zimbabweans living in South
Africa.''
The difficulties
faced by activists like Kapuya are highlighted in a new Human Rights
Watch (HRW) report issued Wednesday, titled "You
Will Be Thoroughly Beaten": The Brutal Suppression of Dissent in
Zimbabwe'.
Rights abuses
in the country have escalated since 2000, when the ruling Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) faced its first
real challenge at the polls, from the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC). This grouping became the country's main opposition
party, but has since splintered into two factions.
"Since 2000,
the authorities in Zimbabwe have routinely resorted to violent tactics
to silence criticism of their poor human rights record and to prevent
human rights activists from exposing abuses in the country; repression
of political activity and dissent has been particularly noticeable
prior to election periods," notes HRW, in the 28-page report.
"Whereas in
the beginning of Zimbabwe’s political crisis it was war veterans,
youth militia, and ruling party supporters who chiefly dealt out
violence and intimidation to opposition supporters and civil society
activists, in the past three years such abuses have increasingly
been carried out by army, police and state security personnel,"
the New York-based grouping adds.
"The government
has turned to more violent and repressive tactics as economic and
political conditions continue to deteriorate and people increasingly
express their discontent."
The document
lists alleged abuses against members of civil society groups, trade
unionists and other activists by police and intelligence officials.
These include
a police assault on 15 officials from the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), and some 500 activists from
the NCA in Harare on Sep. 13 and Sep. 25 respectively.
The report also
describes a student activist being detained for four days and beaten
by police in the north-eastern town of Bindura, in May. "During
interrogation they beat me with baton sticks, clenched fists and
kept kicking me," the student is quoted as saying. "Every night
they would threaten me and say, 'We will kill you tonight,'."
"Each night
they would come and they would strip me naked and then handcuff
me with my hands between my legs so that I would not be able to
move while they beat me," the activists adds. "Sometimes they would
be three people beating me, then two, or at times four. I was being
accused of trying to facilitate regime change and working for the
opposition."
Efforts by IPS
to get comment on the HRW report from the Zimbabwean Embassy in
South Africa's capital, Pretoria, were fruitless.
However, Nicholas
Dube, a representative of one of the MDC factions, dismisses Harare's
claim that demonstrations by the NCA and ZCTU were aimed at toppling
the government of Robert Mugabe.
"The ZCTU protest
wasn't about regime change. It was about bread-and-butter issues,
and it was about access to ARVs," he said. ARVs, anti-retroviral
drugs, prolong the lives of people who have contracted HIV. According
to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, Zimbabwe has
an adult HIV prevalence rate of 20.1 percent.
"The leadership
of the ZCTU was attacked and brutally beaten up by the police,"
Dube added. "To make matters worst, President Mugabe congratulated
the police for doing a good job. It clearly demonstrates that the
government of Zimbabwe is giving orders to police to crack down
on perceived opponents."
Dube believes
ZANU-PF -- in power since independence in 1980 -- will only recognise
the opposition if further international pressure is brought to bear
on Zimbabwean authorities.
"Internally
there's nothing people can do. The opposition has been weakened
by police brutality, backed by the ruling party," he told IPS.
Dube, who is
also in self-imposed exile in South Africa, says these interventions
should come from organisations such as the African Union (AU) and
the Southern African Development Community (SADC). Zimbabwe is a
member of both groupings.
"It's critical
that the AU Commission on Human Rights and SADC look at this problem
and come up with a solution," he noted. "Their silence is not helping
the people of Zimbabwe."
Critics say
South Africa's policy of so-called "quiet diplomacy" has failed
to persuade Mugabe to resolve Zimbabwe's crisis.
Instead, the
president blames former colonial power Britain for his country's
woes. He says Zimbabwe, under sanctions from the United States and
European Union, is being vilified for seizing land from several
thousand white farmers to resettle landless blacks.
For its part,
HRW has made various recommendations for improving the situation
in Zimbabwe. These include having the government ensure that all
police, security and military forces adhere to the country's international
legal obligation to respect individuals' rights to freedom from
arbitrary arrest and torture.
The rights group
has also called, amongst others, for all people who are detained
to be brought before a judge within 48 hours of arrest -- and for
an independent body to be established for probing complaints against
the police service.
Civil society
and human rights groups believe that about five million Zimbabweans
have left their country for greener pastures since 2000.
"We have over
3,000 (Zimbabwean) teachers...in South Africa. It's sad to see a
country losing its brains just like that," Selvan Chetty, deputy
director of the Solidarity
Peace Trust, a church-backed human rights organisation, said
in an interview with IPS. The group, which monitors and highlights
abuses in Zimbabwe, is based in Port Shepstone: a town in South
Africa's coastal province of KwaZulu-Natal. (END/2006)
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