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Assassins
in Zimbabwe aim at the grass roots
Barry
Bearak and Delia W. Dugger, The New York Times
June 22, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/22/world/africa/22zimbabwe.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
Johannesburg
- Tonderai Ndira was a shrewd choice for assassination:
young, courageous and admired. Kill him and fear would pulse through
a thousand spines. He was an up-and-comer in Zimbabwe's opposition
party, a charismatic figure with a strong following in the Harare
slums where he lived. There were rumors his name was on a hit list.
For weeks he prudently hid out, but his wife, Plaxedess, desperately
pleaded with him to come home for a night. He slipped back to his
family on May 12. The five killers pushed through the door soon
after dawn, as Mr. Ndira, 30, slept and his wife made porridge for
their two children. He was wrenched from his bed, roughed up and
stuffed into the back seat of a double-cab Toyota pickup. "They're
going to kill me," he cried, Plaxedess said. As the children
watched from the door, two men sat on his back, a gag was shoved
in his mouth and his head was yanked upward, a technique of asphyxiation
later presumed in a physician's post mortem to be the cause
of death.
Zimbabwe will
have a presidential runoff election on Friday, an epochal choice
between Robert Mugabe, the 84-year-old liberation hero who has run
the nation for nearly three decades, and the opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai. But in the morbid and sinister weeks recently passed,
the balloting has been preceded by a calculated campaign of bloodletting
meant to intimidate the opposition and strip it of some of its most
valuable foot soldiers. Even as hundreds of election observers from
neighboring countries were deployed across Zimbabwe in the past
few days, the gruesome killings and beatings of opposition figures
have continued. The body of the wife of Harare's newly chosen
mayor was found Wednesday, her face so badly bashed in that even
her own brother only recognized her by her brown corduroy skirt
and plaited hair. On Thursday, the bodies of four more opposition
activists turned up after they had been abducted by men shouting
ruling party slogans.
The strategic
killing of activists and their families has deprived the opposition
party, the Movement for Democratic Change, not only of its dead
stalwarts but also of hundreds of other essential workers who have
fled while reasonably supposing they will be next. At least 85 activists
and supporters of the party have been killed, according to civic
group tallies, including several operatives who, while little known
outside Zimbabwe, were mainstays within it. They were thorns in
the side of the government, frequently in and out of jail, bold
enough to campaign in the no-go areas where Mr. Mugabe's party
previously faced little competition. "They're targeting
people who are unknown because cynically they know they can get
away with it," said David Coltart, an opposition senator.
One such target
was Better Chokururama, a 31-year-old activist with an appetite
for bravado and fisticuffs, nicknamed "Texas" for both
the cowboy hats he favored and the moniker of a torture camp from
which he once escaped. He was abducted on April 19, and his legs
crushed by his captors with boulders. He said in an interview afterward,
as he lay with both legs in casts, that he had told his captors
"that beating people would not change anything because the
opposition had beaten the governing party, Zanu PF, in the elections."
"They laughed loudly," he said, "then threw me out
of the moving vehicle." Weeks later, he was snatched again,
with two other opposition activists; the three bodies were discovered
separately and identified by family members. But the violence has
been aimed not only at campaigners but at voters as well. So-called
pungwe sessions, the Shona word for all-night vigils, have become
common in areas where people once loyal to President Mugabe dared
vote against him in the first round of voting on March 29.
Villagers are
rousted from their homes and herded together. Suspected opposition
supporters are then called forward to be thrashed. In Chaona, a
village in Mashonaland Central Province, a man named Fredrick said
he was among 10 suspected opposition supporters tortured for five
hours under a tree. One man was caught while trying to escape. "They
tied his genitals with an elastic band and beat him until he passed
out and died," said Fredrick, who asked that his last name
not be used in order to protect himself. He said a second man was
killed after his tormentors dripped bubbles of burning plastic on
his naked body. Prosper Mutema, 34, from Mtoko in Mashonaland East,
said he was among dozens captured on June 4, taken to a torture
camp and beaten all night with sticks and clubs called knobkerries.
In the morning, he was ordered to hand over a cow as a "repentance
fee." Lacking so costly an animal, he pleaded for a more modest
penitence, eventually winning his freedom with a bucket of maize
meal and a chicken.
There have been
dozens of killings, thousands of beatings and tens of thousands
of people displaced, civic groups, doctors and relief agencies say.
Though roadblocks seal off rural areas where most of the abuse is
taking place, there are so many surviving victims and witnesses
that human rights workers and journalists have been able to catalog
much of the brutality. Pain is often inflicted through hours-long
pummeling of the soles of the feet and the flesh of the buttocks.
"When Mugabe declares himself the winner, the world must know
what he has done," said the opposition's director of
elections, Ian Makone, who has gone underground and travels only
at night. Two of his chief aides have been killed; several others
have scattered into exile. Mr. Mugabe, on the other hand, is campaigning
boldly. A vigorous octogenarian, his life span is already more than
double the national average in this destitute country, where inflation
has gone so berserk that a loaf of bread now costs $30 billion Zimbabwean
dollars. Mr. Mugabe openly portrays the election in the terminology
of warfare, a battle to preserve sovereignty against puppets put
up by the British, the nation's onetime colonial masters who
in his view want to reclaim the land for white domination. Either
he will win, he insists, or he will keep power by force. "We
are not going to give up our country for a mere X on a ballot,"
he said in a speech last week. "How can a ballpoint pen fight
with a gun?"
The opposition
claims that Mr. Tsvangirai won a majority in the earlier round of
voting, and that the government manipulated the count to force a
runoff and ready its violent response. Whatever the actual count,
hard-liners in the governing party agreed on a "war-like/military
style strategy" to recapture votes that had drifted astray
and win a second ballot, according to the minutes of one of their
meetings obtained from a Zanu PF official. "This is not going
to be an election," said one senior Zanu PF official, speaking
on condition of anonymity because the plans are secret. "The
election happened in March. This is going to be a war. We are going
all out to win this, using all state resources at our disposal."
Army officers were sent to every province to direct the strategy,
which eventually employed soldiers, intelligence agents, policemen
and paramilitary groups known as war veterans and youth brigades
called the green bombers, the senior official said. Ward by ward
voting results dictated the campaign's geography. In the Zaka
district of Masvingo, once a reliable Zanu PF stronghold, Mr. Tsvangirai
won in March, and the opposition party also took three of four seats
in Parliament and the Senate seat. Reprisals began within weeks.
Names of the opposition's poll workers had been published
in the newspaper as required by law, and these workers seem to have
been systematically identified for nighttime beatings. Hundreds
of them have since fled, leaving their polling stations vulnerable
to ballot stuffing on Friday, said the constituency's senator-elect,
Misheck Marava.
He said his
wife and children were savagely beaten with chains and whips. Then,
on June 4 at 4:15 a.m., 13 men led by soldiers attacked the local
opposition office at Jerera Growth Point, where some of those displaced
by violence had sought a haven. At least two men were killed. The
office was set afire with gasoline. As one of survivor of the blaze,
Isaac Mbanje, lay with maddening pain in a Harare hospital, skin
peeling from his raw wounds and fluids seeping through the bandages
on his charred hands, he described his ordeal. One of the assailants
ordered him: "Lie down! Keep quiet!" Then shots were fired
from an AK-47. "One of the guys who was shot fell on my body,"
Mr. Mbanje said. Then the attackers set both the dead and living
alight. Tichanzi Gandanga, the opposition's director of elections
in Harare, said he was abducted April 23 by men who blindfolded
and gagged him and then thrust him into a truck. As the vehicle
raced into the countryside, he was badly beaten and stripped before
being dumped onto the road, where he was beaten and kicked and then,
as he hovered near unconsciousness, run over. The men attacking
him were armed and could have shot him, Mr. Gandanga said. He is
not sure why they left him alive, or even if they meant to. "We
had an election machinery with some important foot soldiers,"
Mr. Gandanga said. "These soldiers were identified and eliminated."
Opposition leaders assumed the carnage would stop once election
observers arrived to monitor the vote. But that has hardly proved
true.
Emmanuel Chiroto,
41, was elected to represent his ward in Harare. Fearful of attacks
on his family, he sent his wife, Abigail, 27, and son, Ashley, 4,
to stay with her mother outside the city. But on Sunday, fellow
city councilors chose him as Harare's mayor, and his proud
wife came home the next day to celebrate, he said. Soon after she
arrived, he was called away because a ward chairman had been beaten
up. While Mr. Chiroto was away, two truckloads of men firebombed
his home and abducted his wife and child. Opposition party officials
hurriedly contacted Tanki Mothae, a Lesotho native who is a key
manager of the election monitors from the Southern African Development
Community. "The house was completely destroyed inside,"
Mr. Mothae said in an interview. "The furniture, everything,
was burned to ashes." On Tuesday, Mr. Chiroto's little
boy was dropped off at a police station. Wednesday, his wife's
battered body was found in a Harare morgue. Mr. Chiroto still has
not had the heart to tell Ashley that his mother is dead, he said.
The boy told his father he had sat on his blindfolded mother's
lap as she was held captive and then he was left behind as soldiers
took her away. "We need to go get Mommy," the 4-year-old
has told his father over and over. "We have to go! She's
in the bush. Let's go to Mommy!"
*Four journalists
contributed reporting from Harare, Zimbabwe
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