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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
"Bullets
for each of you": State-sponsored violence since Zimbabwe's
March 29 elections
Human
Rights Watch
June 09, 2008
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2008/zimbabwe0608/
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Summary
The campaign of violence and repression in Zimbabwe, aimed at destroying
opposition and ensuring that Robert Mugabe is returned as president
in runoff elections on June 27, 2008 is claiming thousands of victims
as the government at national and local levels actively, systematically
and methodically targets Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) activists
and perceived MDC supporters.
The violence has been
particularly concentrated in former rural strongholds of the Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF)—areas that
to the party's shock voted for the MDC in the parliamentary
and first-round presidential elections.
Punishing "sell-outs,"
former ZANU-PF supporters who voted for the MDC, is a clear objective.
Within government-supporting circles, the operation has been dubbed
"Operation Makavhoterapapi?" (Operation Where Did You
Put Your Vote?).
Around the country, the
ruling party and its allies are blocking access to villages targeted
by ZANU-PF violence, preventing people from fleeing, including those
in need of medical treatment. Party allies have warned hospitals
not to treat victims of political violence or face retaliation.
Meanwhile, measures are being put in place to restrict both local
and international electoral monitoring of the runoff poll.
If current conditions
are maintained, there is no possibility of a credible, free and
fair poll. Time has nearly run out for Southern African Development
Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU) to make the necessary
political interventions to end the violence and ensure a free and
fair vote.
This report, based on investigations in Zimbabwe, describes the
scale of the abuses and identifies those responsible—officials
from ZANU-PF, often working through proxy forces of so-called war
veterans and youth militia, backed by members of the armed forces
and police. Local institutions have identified at least 2,000 beatings
and cases of torture. At least 36 people have been killed, including,
in May, abducted MDC activists. Given the movement restrictions
in place and the limit to information flow that results, Human Rights
Watch believes that the number of people attacked far exceeds these
figures.
ZANU-PF officials and
"war veterans" are beating, torturing and mutilating
suspected MDC activists and supporters in hundreds of base camps,
many of them army bases, established across the provinces as local
operations centers. Abusive "re-education" meetings
are being held to compel MDC supporters into voting for Mugabe.
In one of these meetings, on May 5 in Chiweshe, ZANU-PF officials
and "war veterans" beat six men to death and tortured
another 70 men and women, including a 76-year-old woman publicly
thrashed in front of assembled villagers.
ZANU-PF and its allies
are engaged in a campaign of looting and destruction, slaughtering
animals, stealing food and property, and burning down homesteads.
More than 3,000 people
are known to have fled the violence and are now internally displaced
in cities and towns throughout the country with inadequate access
to food and water. An unknown number have fled across the borders
to Mozambique, Botswana and South Africa.
The violence
is being orchestrated by the Joint Operations Command, which is
headed by senior ZANU-PF officials and includes the heads of the
Zimbabwe Defence Forces, police, prison services, and the Central
Intelligence Organization. In some areas local police are attempting
to enforce the rule of law, but they are being undermined by their
own superior officers.
Human Rights Watch investigations indicate that the army is playing
a major role in supporting the violence. It has provided known "war
veterans" and ZANU-PF supporters with guns, transportation
and bases from which serious human rights violations are carried
out.
The government
is allowing those perpetrating violence to do so with impunity.
Instead of taking action to restore normality and conditions conducive
to free and fair elections, it is further clamping down on civil
society. Since the parliamentary and inconclusive presidential polls
on March 29, 2008 police have arrested human rights lawyers, journalists,
civil society activists and trade unionists on politically motivated
charges.
In an apparent bid to subvert the runoff electoral process and instill
fear in local election officials and observers, police have arrested
more than 100 presiding officers and election officials on politically
motivated charges of electoral fraud.
ZANU-PF supporters
have attacked hundreds of observers from the independent election
organization, the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network, and forced many to flee their homes.
The government has attempted
to portray reports of the violence as exaggerated—and then
mainly perpetrated by the MDC. Human Rights Watch investigations
show that while there have been some attacks by MDC supporters on
ZANU-PF supporters, the number of such incidents is far outweighed
by those perpetrated by ZANU-PF and its allies.
Government complicity
in the violence is reflected in its failure to acknowledge the extent
of the violence and the widespread involvement of senior army officers,
police officials and groups backed by the state security forces.
By allowing perpetrators of abuses with high rank to act with impunity,
President Mugabe and the government of Zimbabwe bear full responsibility
for these serious crimes. There is a long history of impunity for
serious human rights violations perpetrated by ZANU-PF and its allies
when faced by political opposition, stretching back to the 1980s
and atrocities by government military forces in Matabeleland. Violence
around elections intensified following the emergence of the MDC
as a political contender in 1999. What is happening now, however,
eclipses the violence in any previous election.
For Zimbabwe's
future stability, it is imperative that the country breaks with
its history of impunity. The human rights violations documented
in this report constitute grave abuses for which those responsible
must be held accountable. The government must impartially investigate
and fairly prosecute those who have organized and committed politically
motivated violence and related crimes since the March 29 elections.
Any future government—whether it emerges from the presidential
runoff or from negotiations between the two main parties—should
not grant amnesty to perpetrators of serious abuses.
The AU and SADC, supported by the United Nations (UN), have only
days in which to make an impact on reducing violence and ensuring
a free and fair vote. This is an opportunity for clear political
leadership in support of human rights and the future stability of
Zimbabwe, which, as recent xenophobic violence in South Africa has
demonstrated, is increasingly impacting the domestic situation of
its neighbors. Now is the time for failed mediation
strategies to be abandoned, and a clear message given to the authorities
that they face becoming regional pariahs should no action be taken.
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