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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
"They
beat me like a dog": Political persecution of opposition activists
and supporters in Zimbabwe
Human
Rights Watch
August 12, 2008
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2008/zimbabwe0808/
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Summary
On July 21, 2008 President Robert Mugabe, leader of the ruling Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), and Morgan
Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), signed a Memorandum
of Understanding in Zimbabwe's capital Harare, paving
the way for talks to resolve the country's political impasse.
President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, appointed by the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) to help address Zimbabwe's
ongoing political crisis, is facilitating the talks between the
two political parties. Mbeki is expected to brief SADC leaders on
the progress of the talks at the annual SADC summit in Sandton,
South Africa on August 16 and 17. The summit provides SADC leaders
with an opportunity to effectively press Zimbabwe's leadership
to address crucial human rights issues prior to any transitional
government arising from the current negotiations. Human Rights Watch
believes that no durable solution to the political crisis in Zimbabwe
can be found unless the human rights violations that are at the
root cause of the crisis are addressed.
The government
of Zimbabwe and its proxy forces of youth militia1 and "war
veterans"2 have committed and continue to commit serious crimes
in the context of general elections that took place on March 29,
2008, and the presidential runoff of June 27. This report follows
Human Rights Watch's June 9 report, "Bullets for Each
of You": State-Sponsored Violence since Zimbabwe's March
29 Elections, which gave a comprehensive account of government-sponsored
abuses that took place in the aftermath of the March 29 general
elections. This report is based on eyewitness accounts from newly
elected MDC Members of Parliament (MPs), councilors, activists,
perceived MDC supporters and others to demonstrate the serious nature
of abuses committed by ZANU-PF supporters and government-backed
youth militia and "war veterans" in the weeks leading
up to the June 27 presidential runoff. These abuses include killings,
beatings, abductions and torture.
This report
also describes abuses by ZANU-PF that continue to take place despite
ongoing negotiations between the two parties. Hundreds of MDC activists
who fled the violence in the weeks before the June 27 runoff remain
in hiding while "war veterans" and youth militia continue
to terrorize villagers in the rural areas. According to local non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), ZANU-PF and its allies have been implicated
in the killing of at least 163 people and the beating and torture
of more than 5,000 people over the past three months. Thirty-two
of these people were killed after the June 27 runoff, and two since
the two parties signed the Memorandum of Understanding. The government
has made little effort to dismantle the torture camps and bases
that it established in the immediate aftermath of the March 29 elections.
The continued
existence of these camps and armed ZANU-PF supporters, youth militia
and "war veterans" raises the possibility of further
violence and highlights the precarious nature of the human rights
situation in the country.
Abuses continue
to take place with almost total impunity. Serious crimes are committed
without investigation, prosecution or legal redress or compensation
for the victims. Police have taken little or no substantial action
to investigate the abuses documented in this report. To Human Rights
Watch's knowledge no alleged perpetrators have been questioned
or arrested despite victims and witnesses naming them as the abusers.
Instead, the police have embarked on a witch-hunt of elected MDC
MPs with at least 12 facing what Human Rights Watch believes to
be politically motivated criminal charges. The government of Zimbabwe
has also failed to investigate, let alone prosecute, ZANU-PF officials
and army officers who allegedly planned, coordinated, and implemented
or were otherwise implicated in the serious crimes that have taken
place since March 29.
The lack of
justice and accountability for serious crimes is of grave concern
and should be a priority for all those involved in the ongoing talks.
Zimbabwe's longstanding history of impunity for such crimes
should not be ignored in the name of political expediency, and should
be immediately addressed by the political parties with the help
of SADC and the African Union.
Continuing government
restrictions on the distribution of humanitarian assistance including
food aid and treatment for people living with AIDS by local and
international agencies have had a devastating impact on people in
the rural areas of Zimbabwe with millions of people in need of food
aid. In the past the government has used food aid as a political
weapon to discriminate against opposition supporters. The current
suspension points to continuing attempts by the government to control
the distribution of humanitarian assistance and deny it to perceived
supporters of the MDC.
The continuing
violence, repression and suspension of humanitarian aid by ZANU-PF
shows the absence of good faith in which Mugabe and ZANU-PF are
participating in the current talks. The appalling human rights conditions
also call into question ZANU-PF's credibility as a political
partner. The political crisis calls for more than mere facilitation
by Thabo Mbeki; it requires strong and principled action by SADC
leaders and SADC as an institution. SADC leaders should make it
clear to Mugabe and ZANU-PF that a resolution to the crisis can
only be reached if his government acts immediately to end human
rights violations. The government of Zimbabwe must make concrete
commitments and take clear action to improve human rights conditions
on the ground if the people of Zimbabwe are to have any confidence
in the political negotiations.
SADC should
insist on a full program of human rights reform as a part of any
negotiations towards a transitional government and on measurable
human rights progress. If the government of Zimbabwe fails to initiate
these measures, SADC should consider excluding Zimbabwe from any
future summits and meetings of the regional body.
Human Rights
Watch urges SADC leaders to call on the government of Zimbabwe to
take the following measures without delay:
- End the violent
campaign against MDC activists and perceived MDC supporters by
state security forces, ZANU-PF supporters and officials, youth
militia and "war veterans."
- Ensure that
the police immediately dismantle all torture camps and bases throughout
the country and prosecute those responsible for torture and other
mistreatment.
- Cease the
politically motivated arrests of MDC officials and activists,
and release those arbitrarily detained.
- Ensure that
police take swift and impartial action to protect all Zimbabweans
from human rights violations and to investigate all politically-motivated
killings and assaults.
- Lift the
suspension against local and international humanitarian agencies
providing assistance in the country.
- Demobilize
and disarm all ZANU-PF supporters and officials, youth militia
and "war veterans."
- Suspend from
duty, investigate and fairly prosecute government officials, military
officers, soldiers, and police officers responsible for serious
violations of international human rights.
- In accordance
with international standards, convene an independent commission
of inquiry to investigate reports of extrajudicial executions,
torture and ill-treatment.
- Ensure that
those implicated in serious human rights abuses are excluded from
any future government.
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