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'cheeky little devil' leads rights fight in Zimbabwe
Celia W. Dugger, International Herald Tribune
October 18, 2008
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/10/17/africa/profile.php
Jenni Williams,
Zimbabwe's hell-raising practitioner of nonviolent civil disobedience,
was hauled from a Bulawayo jail cell during one of her 33 arrests
for leading street protests against President Robert Mugabe's rule.
In a tiny office, she
accused the baton-wielding police of assaulting her.
When the two officers
in the room tauntingly told her she was a liar, she turned around,
dropped her pants and showed them the bruises on her backside, recalled
her lawyer, Perpetua Dube, who was watching.
"You can't bare
your bottom to me!" one of the officers shouted, threatening
to charge her with indecent exposure.
Williams - a spitfire
rebel with an appreciation of the absurd - subsequently described
herself in an e-mail to friends as sitting on the softest cushions
she could find and "giggling in between wincing in pain."
As of Thursday, she is
back in a Bulawayo jail cell yet again - this time for leading women
in a march on government buildings to demand food for the starving
and progress on the formation of a power-sharing government with
the political opposition.
During years when millions
of her compatriots have fled the country - among them her mother,
husband and three children, now in their 20s - Williams, 46, a stocky
high school dropout, has lived underground in Zimbabwe, moving from
safe house to safe house as she and her colleagues built a formidable
protest movement among the church women of Harare and Bulawayo.
"Zimbabwe is my
home, so why should I go?" she asked defiantly. "We have
made a pact as a family. I am supposed to prepare Zimbabwe so everyone
can come home."
Dozens of times over
the past five years, she has led seamstresses and maids, vegetable
sellers and hair dressers onto the streets in Zimbabwe's struggle
for democracy. They sing gospel songs, carry brooms to sweep the
government clean (a figurative gesture, mostly) and bang on pots
empty of food.
On May 28th, Williams
and 13 other marchers were arrested in the capital, Harare, as they
demanded an end to political violence after a disputed election,
in which Mugabe's enforcers beat thousands of opposition supporters
before a June presidential runoff that pitted him against the opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
The police said Williams
and her fellow protesters had promoted public violence when they
handed out fliers that accused Mugabe of "unleashing violence
on voters."
And Williams,
listed as accused number one, faced an additional charge of causing
disaffection among security forces. In a newsletter, the organization
she leads, Women
of Zimbabwe Arise!, known as Woza, told soldiers and police
officers to refrain from beating people, a statement the police
charged was "likely to induce the members to withhold their
services or to commit breaches" of discipline.
"Hear us loud and
clear - your leaders may get generous retirement packages, but you
will be left to face the justice of the law and the anger of the
people," the newsletter warned.
Williams and a fellow
leader, Magodonga Mahlangu, 35, were held at Chikurubi prison in
Harare for 37 days. In court papers, the police singled out Williams
as a leader of great influence.
"She has got many
sympathizers all over the country" willing to harbor her, the
police said in arguing against bail. "If accused is released,
she is likely to go into hiding."
And that, of course,
is exactly what she did. Now, she and Mahlangu, an indomitable pair
of organizers, have chosen their moment to go back onto the streets
and into the jail cells. Each time she marches, Williams said, she
handles the fear - and the jackhammer thumping of her heart - with
deep breathing.
"Woza's
been a huge thorn in the government's side," said John Worswick,
a ruddy-faced farmer driven from his land in the country's chaotic
land-reform program who now heads Justice
for Agriculture, an alliance of displaced commercial farmers
and farm workers. "If we force Mugabe out, it will be the women
who are his undoing. Jenni's rattled Mugabe more than anyone else."
Williams's trouble-making
lineage stretches back to her grandfather, Raymond MacConville,
who was active in the Irish Republican Army. He escaped arrest in
his homeland and wound up a gold prospector in the British colony
of southern Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe. There he took as his common-law
wife an Ndebele woman, Bahlezi Moyo, who became the family matriarch
and bore him three children, among them Margaret, Jenni's mother.
"A cheeky little
devil, she was," Margaret Daunt, 74 and living in London, said
of Williams. "When she was younger, if anyone crossed her path,
like her sisters or brothers, she had a ferocious Irish temper.
I don't know how the police have arrested her without her lashing
back. She's vowed this nonviolence thing."
Williams fell into politics
with the onset of Zimbabwe's political crisis in 2000. After a referendum
to give Mugabe greater executive powers was defeated with the votes
of trade unionists and the financial backing of white farmers, he
encouraged veterans of Zimbabwe's liberation war to violently invade
large white-owned farms, setting off a collapse of the country's
agricultural economy.
Williams, doing public
relations for the Commercial Farmers Union, began speaking out about
the human rights abuses, as well as the fact that many of the choicest
farms were being given to Mugabe's cronies.
In 2002, a year that
saw Mugabe defeat Tsvangirai in an election many independent observers
believe was stolen, Williams and Sheba Dube-Phiri, chairwoman of
the League of Women Voters, who has since died, started Woza. The
movement was nurtured in the sanctuary of churches - Catholic, Anglican,
Baptist, Methodist and Apostolic.
"The men had failed
us," said Mahlangu. "The crisis in Zimbabwe had been going
on and on. The solutions discussed weren't bread and butter issues,
just power."
In the years since, Woza's
leaders have followed a cardinal rule: they put their own bodies
on the line, a risk Williams says the leaders of Zimbabwe's political
opposition have too often failed to take.
"We will not tell
someone to do what we are not willing to do ourselves," she
said.
Some 2,500 of Woza's
60,000 members have braved the country's fetid, overcrowded jails
- but Williams said many more must join them.
"Removing a dictator
from power is a numbers game," she said.
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