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Victims
tell of vicious floggings in 'The Cage' in Operation No Return
Jane
Fields, Scotsman
November 24, 2008
http://news.scotsman.com/zimbabwe/Victims-tell-of-vicious-floggings.4723008.jp
A packet of
throat lozenges saved his life, he believes. The sweets were tucked
into his top breast pocket when around six police and plainclothes
officials came to his home in Zimbabwe's eastern city of Mutare
this month.
They arrested the man,
an elderly artisan, on charges of illegally dealing in diamonds,
an accusation he vehemently denies.
Late at night, he was
driven along the bumpy road to the Chiadzwa diamond fields and herded
into a "cage", which measured 12 metres by 15, underneath
a tree stripped of all leaves.
A lone lightbulb illuminated
the 70 or so other inmates of the cage, all suspected diamond diggers
and dealers. "This is where I saw the worst of mankind,"
he said.
The Zimbabwe authorities
are calling it Operation Hakudzokwi, or No Return.
Police and soldiers have
launched a massive push to clear the diamond fields of Chiadzwa,
where thousands of Zimbabweans have found riches in an uncontrolled
two-year-long diamond rush.
Sources say that the
head of the air force, Perence Shiri, was in Manicaland province
earlier this month to supervise the clampdown. Helicopters are regularly
seen travelling from an army barracks in Mutare in the direction
of Chiadzwa.
The Scotsman spoke to
one man who was caught up in the clampdown. His buttocks and the
base of his back are purple from where he was beaten.
There were 20 to 30 beatings
a day inside the "cage", said the man, who cannot be named
for his own safety. "I saw at least two people beaten to the
stage where blood came through their trousers," he said.
One woman who was found
in possession of a small scale used for weighing diamonds and at
least 200 (possibly fake) US dollars was beaten with a switch more
than one and a half metres long. After the beatings, an army medical
officer dispensed painkilling tablets, thought to be codeine.
Officials close to the
clampdown told the local Manica Post newspaper this week: "After
this operation, no gweja (illegal dealer] will think of going to
Chiadzwa again."
Diamonds were first discovered
in Chiadzwa in 2006. Until recently, President Robert Mugabe's administration
tolerated almost uncontrolled mining: villagers were allowed to
believe the stones were a gift from their ancestors to help them
through Zimbabwe's economic crisis.
School pupils, teachers
and up to 10,000 foreigners joined the diamond craze, turning the
normally sleepy city of Mutare into a magnet for fortune seekers,
prostitutes and plasma-TV sellers.
But last month, the governor
of Zimbabwe's Reserve Bank, Gideon Gono, announced that the country
was losing $1.3 billion a month from the illegal diamond trade.
That revelation appears to have prompted Operation No Return.
Police are now trawling
Mutare's suburbs with a list of the people they believe have recently
come into wealth, and are thus suspected diamond dealers.
Out in dusty Chiadzwa,
police patrol on horseback with dogs. The army has set up a tented
barracks. There are testimonies of terrified youths fleeing in terror
as plainclothes officers shoot at them.
Already, there have been
a number of deaths: the Manica Post reported on Friday that 20 bodies
of illegal panners lay unclaimed in Mutare mortuaries, some of them
shot in clashes with the security forces.
Locals claim around seven
bodies were brought in broad daylight to Mutare central police station
earlier this month.
The elderly man was released
after two nights in custody. Though he had been handed a plate of
sadza and cabbage to share with three others at mealtimes, he says
the throat lozenges kept him going in the dust and the heat.
As he was crouching on
the ground before his release, an army officer knelt down next to
him. "I'm sorry about what has happened to you," he said.
"Things will change
soon."
Background
The Chiadzwa
diamond field, also known as the Marange Fields, used to be managed
by De Beers.
Under Robert Mugabe's
ruling Zanu-PF government, it was confiscated from African Consolidated
Resources (ACR) and handed to the state-owned Zimbabwe Mining Development
Corporation in December 2006. Strongly condemning violent police
raids on illegal diamond diggers, the company has since taken the
government to court.
ACR says it has no way
of preventing the violence as staff are denied entry by the police.
In the most recent raid
by state security forces, 10,000 people were digging for diamonds
about 20 miles north-east of Mutare.
Police, some on horseback,
floodlit the area and unleashed their dogs, then began firing after
people started attacking the dogs with iron bars. It is thought
about 14 to 16 people died. But Wayne Bvudzijena, an assistant police
commissioner, has denied having any knowledge about the raid.
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