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Political
violence Report - August 2007
- Overview
Zimbabwe Human
Rights NGO Forum
October 08, 2007
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Overview
The SADC Heads
of State and Government met in Lusaka, Zambia from 16 - 17 August,
to discuss among other issues the deteriorating political and human
rights situation in Zimbabwe. However on the eve of the SADC meeting,
a 62 - member delegation of the Southern African Peoples' Solidarity
Network (SAPSN) travelling to Lusaka from Harare, for the SADC Peoples'
Summit was turned back by the Zambian immigration authorities at
the Chirundu Border Post. The Zambian authorities then handed the
Zimbabwean civil society activists over to the Zimbabwean police
who detained and harassed 40 of the victims at Chirundu Police Post.
This report will show that the political environment has largely
been defined by acts of torture, intimidation and politically motivated
violence against human rights defenders and other pressure groups
seeking to express their views on the problems in Zimbabwe. For
instance, 4 students from the National
University of Science and Technology (NUST) were tortured by
the police for speaking out against the current government and what
they perceive as mismanagement of the University by the authorities.
Violence and
intimidation tactics continued to be deployed by the police against
members of Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) in various parts of the country. In
Bulawayo, 6 members of WOZA were allegedly taken by force from their
various homes by the police in vehicles bearing South African number
plates to a secluded area 40 km away from Bulawayo. The police reportedly
questioned the victims on the whereabouts of the WOZA leaders who
they were failing to locate. The traumatised women were only released
the following day. In another incident involving WOZA members in
Masvingo, the police unlawfully arrested and detained 18 of them.
It is alleged that six of the women were heavily brutalised and
tortured by the police.
Close to 30
members of the ZNA were at it again in August as they went around
the high - density suburb of Dzivaresekwa in Harare beating up women
and children vending various wares. In an unrelated incident, on
8 August more than 70 uniformed soldiers ran amok in Esigodini in
Matabeleland South where they assaulted villagers and looted the
village headman's shop. This was reportedly in retaliation
to a scuffle involving army officers and the Esigodini villagers
the previous week during a beer brawl.
In incidences
that clearly confirm that the political environment is not yet safe
or free in Zimbabwe for any democratic activities, a journalist
who works for the Standard, an independent newspaper in Zimbabwe
was abducted by suspected ZANU PF supporters in Gutu on allegations
that he was on a spying mission for the US based radio station Studio
7. The said journalist had been in the area wanting to investigate
reports that MDC supporters had been barred by CIO officers and
ZANU PF supporters from attending the late MDC National Chairman,
Isaac Matongo's memorial service.
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