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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Rights
group opens exhibit on abuses in Zimbabwe
Associated Press
August 26, 2008
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/08/26/africa/AF-South-Africa-Zimbabwe-Rights.php
Images of torture
victims and police beating protesters along with the words of human
rights activists are part of a new exhibit that Amnesty International
hopes will inspire citizens across Africa to press their governments
for action in Zimbabwe.
Albie Sachs, who fought
white rule and now sits on post-apartheid South Africa's highest
court, opened the exhibit Tuesday, saying its strongest images weren't
the most gruesome, often taken hurriedly by photographers who risked
arrest for portraying Zimbabwe in a bad light.
Sachs pointed instead
to formal portraits of Zimbabweans like lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa,
renowned for her defense of opposition politicians, journalists
and human rights campaigners, who joined him at the opening.
The portraits show "that
spirit of what the people of the country can achieve despite all
the difficulties," Sachs said.
Then he embraced Mtetwa,
who said: "It's the first time I've been hugged by a judge."
Sachs responded: "If
you can't hug a judge, become a judge."
Sachs's hug was awkward
— his right arm was blown off in an apartheid-era car bomb
explosion blamed on the white government's intelligence agencies.
Tuesday, he was a metaphor for transformation — hoped for
or realized. So was the setting, a jail where Nelson Mandela and
other anti-apartheid activists were once held that, after apartheid
ended in 1994, became the headquarters of the highest tribunal,
the Constitutional Court.
Over the next month,
the Amnesty International exhibit titled "My Rights My Struggle"
is scheduled to travel to countries including Tanzania, whose president
currently chairs the African Union; and Botswana and Senegal, whose
governments have been unusually critical of Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe, who is accused of trampling human rights and ruining
his country's economy to stay in power.
Amnesty International
urged visitors to the exhibit in Johannesburg to send post cards
expressing their concern about Zimbabwe to South African President
Thabo Mbeki, who is mediating power-sharing talks between Mugabe
and his opposition. Mbeki also is the current chair of the Southern
African Development Community, which includes Zimbabwe and is the
key regional bloc. SADC has been diverted from its economic agenda
by the political troubles in Zimbabwe.
The exhibit included
a video and a short play by a Zimbabwean street theater group that
was to be performed daily, depicting Zimbabweans declaring their
refusal "to live in constant fear." The portraits were
accompanied by taped testimonials, such as one from trade union
activist Lucia Gladys Matibenga. She described being beaten at a
workers' rights rally in 2006. Her arm was broken and her ear drum
ruptured.
"I would ask the
whole world for just one minute to pray for Zimbabwe," Matibenga
says. "To pray for a new Zimbabwe."
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