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Violence
against civil society rises: report
The
Zimbabwe Independent
November 03, 2006
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=11&id=8298&siteid=1
VIOLENT repression of
civil society organisations has intensified in Zimbabwe in the past
three years, claimed a new report from an international rights body.
The 28-page
report, You Will Be Thoroughly
Beaten: The Brutal Suppression of Dissent in Zimbabwe, from
Human Rights Watch, has documented alleged systematic abuses against
rights activists, including excessive use of force by police during
protests, arbitrary arrests and detentions in the past year.
"When Zimbabweans
engage in peaceful protest, the government responds with brutal
repression," said Georgette Gagnon, deputy Africa director
at Human Rights Watch. "The authorities use torture, arbitrary
arrest and detention to deter activists from engaging in their right
to freely assemble and express their views."
The rights organisation
has urged the Zimbabwean government to ensure that the security
apparatus respects the rule of law and human rights and conduct
investigations into cases of alleged abuse and torture at the hands
of the police.
State Security minister
Didymus Mutasa rubbished the Human Rights Watch report as "damn
lies". "Why should we not ensure that our people observe
our laws? We don't need the international community to come
and tell us how to observe our laws. When our laws are transgressed,
action will be taken."
The report cited
the alleged assault and torture while in custody of more than a
dozen Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions members after a protest was foiled
by the security forces in September this year.
Zimbabwe
Election Support Network chair Reginald Matchaba-Hove, a medical
doctor who initially examined all the unionists, told Human Rights
Watch: "I was really shocked and taken back by what I saw.
To me the injuries showed that they (the unionists) were trying
to protect themselves. They were trying to protect their heads using
their raised arms. They had fractures to their arms, wrists, and
fingers. They all had defensive injuries. The blows were coming
to their heads."
Mutasa explained that
the police had been provoked by the unionists to take action. "One
of the trade unionists had attacked a policeman at a roadblock.
So then the police told the trade unionists: 'Now you are
in our hands, we are beating you.' How can people attack the
police and not expect them to retaliate?"
The Human Rights Watch
document said police had also appeared to have singled out student
activists. "The police regularly disrupt student meetings,
and student leaders in particular face constant harassment and intimidation
from the police."
Police have
also used laws such as the Public
Order and Security Act and the Miscellaneous Offences Act to
justify the arbitrary arrest and detention of hundreds of civil
society activists around the country, alleged the rights organisation.
"After arrest, most of the activists are released within hours,
but some are held for days, often without charge. Others are brought
before the judicial authorities to answer charges that, in many
cases, are dismissed by the courts."
Civil society activists
who had been detained told Human Rights Watch that they were often
held in overcrowded and filthy conditions, and sometimes denied
legal counsel and access to food, water and medical assistance.
Human rights lawyer Alec
Muchadehama is quoted in the report as saying: "The police
believe that human rights advocates want to topple a democratically-elected
government. Anything that is likely to link to human rights is construed
as an attempt to change the government."
Last week an
alliance of Zimbabwe's churches, including the influential
Zimbabwe
Catholic Bishops Conference, called for a new constitution to
help end the country's political and economic crisis, and
backed their initiative with the need to engage the government constructively.
The church bodies have put together a 50-page document containing
solutions titled The
Zimbabwe We Want: Towards a National Vision for Zimbabwe, a
product of four months of wide consultations with Zimbabweans, which
was presented to President Robert Mugabe on Friday. Speaking at
the launch, Mugabe reportedly said although he welcomed their initiative
for dialogue, his government had some "non-negotiable"
interests.
The alliance is proposing
the establishment of an independent Land Commission to ensure fair
distribution of land, and a review of controversial media and security
laws that critics say are being used to stifle the opposition.
Mugabe said he was not convinced the country needed a new constitution
and those who believed that Zimbabwe's Independence constitution
was imposed by Britain were wrong.
"We fought
for it, our people died for it. There could never be another constitution
so dear, so sacrosanct. True, there might be amendments necessary
to make, let us say so, but to say this is not home-grown is as
if the British imposed this on us," he was quoted as saying.
— Irin.
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