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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Beatings
and torture intensify as Zimbabwe prepares to vote again
Jan Raath, The Times (SA)
May 12, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3913183.ece
Solomon was naked and
lying on his back in the bath. He smiled in greeting. For a man
in hospital he looked fine. Then he turned over to show his wounds.
In each buttock there was a dark hole into which you could put both
fists. The edges of the holes were ragged frills of dead grey tissue.
At 4am a week ago, about 200 members of President Mugabe's
Zanu PF militia arrived at the peasant farmer's village in
Chiweshe, communal land north of Harare. Solomon, 33, and 60 others
were rounded up as supporters of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), handcuffed and forced to lie with their stomachs on
the ground and with someone sitting on their backs. Then they were
beaten ferociously, in relay, with sticks about a yard long. Solomon
was about to be beaten a second time when the police arrived and
the mob scattered. His uncle came to fetch him and take him to hospital
at midnight. "It was too dangerous to collect me in the day,"
he said. For the past week doctors at the private Avenues Clinic
have been removing more and more dead tissue from his wounds. The
necrosis is so serious that staff have not been able to dress the
affected area: Solomon has to endure salt baths.
Since the beginning
of April more than 900 people have been treated in hospital after
"incidents of organized violence and torture", the respected
group Zimbabwe
Doctors for Human Rights said. The attacks followed the first
round of presidential elections on March 29, when Morgan Tsvangirai,
the opposition leader, beat President Mugabe, but not by enough
to win outright. The group added that there had been "a dramatic
escalation" of violence in the past two weeks and the figure
of 900 was significantly less than the real figure of victims "as
the violence is now on such a scale that it is impossible to document
all cases". The group has confirmed 22 deaths but, it said,
"at least double that number has been reported but are yet
to be confirmed". On one day alone hospitals in Harare had
treated 30 fractures; supplies of plaster of Paris were exhausted.
Dennis, a teacher and MDC organiser from Uzumba-Maramba-Pfungwe
communal area, hitherto regarded as one of the most fanatically
pro-Mugabe areas, has been in hospital for two weeks, his left arm
with three fractures and a shattered kneecap, all inflicted with
an axe. He did not dare to go to his local hospital after hearing
threats that it would be burnt down if MDC supporters were treated
there.
Police spokesmen have
either refused to comment or have declared that those who died did
so of natural causes. The doctors' organization claims that
senior police officers, including Augustine Chihuri, the commissioner-general,
are complicit in the brutality. It said: "One nursing sister
treating victims in a rural clinic was observed to be shaking so
violently with fear she could not write." In one ward at the
Avenues Clinic yesterday were two grey-bearded brothers in their
late fifties, one of them with injuries similar to - and as
severe as - Solomon's, and turning septic. A third brother
was in another ward. On Saturday their elder brother died at the
clinic of his injuries. "In the run-off, I am going to vote
MDC," one brother said defiantly. "It's dangerous
but I don't care. I want change." Down the corridor,
Dennis said: "Being beaten like this and I go back and vote
for him? What for? This time he [Mr Mugabe] is gone."
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