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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Land
of broken trust
Karin Brulliard,
Washington Post
November 30,
2008
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=19794
Perhaps, Kudakwashe
Tsumele said, it is better that he cannot walk. If he could traverse
the red dirt pathways surrounding his rural home, he might pass
supporters of this troubled nation's ruling party. And then, he
said, he "would want to kill." Instead, Tsumele, 22, lies
mutilated by burns and bedridden under a blue mosquito net, six
months after armed thugs loyal to President Robert Mugabe set fire
to the opposition party office where he was working as a campaign
volunteer. If he could leave his brick shanty, his relatives said,
he might face what they do: taunts from ruling party backers, promises
of more blazes. "There is no trust between them and us,"
said his uncle, Lawrence Tsumele, 43. "There is no light."
The June 3 attack
was part of a bloody crackdown designed by Zimbabwe's security forces
after opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai outpolled Mugabe, the
nation's leader for 28 years, in the March presidential election.
Tsvangirai pulled out of a run-off three months later, citing the
violence that left more than 80-opposition supporters dead. Mugabe
won that vote, which was internationally condemned. The parties
signed a power-sharing deal
in September, but they have deadlocked over its implementation.
As Zimbabwe's leaders haggle, hostilities remain raw on the ground,
where rivalries are so hardened that reconciliation seems a distant
notion. Widespread brutality has subsided, but politically motivated
violence directed largely against the opposition - including torture,
looting, assault and rape - has continued, and threats are on a
dangerous upswing, activists and elected officials say.
"There
is a lot of animosity between neighbors, where people are saying,
'It was you who gave my name to the perpetrators,' or, 'It was your
son who attacked my husband,' " said Jestina Mukoko, executive
director of the Zimbabwe
Peace Project, which tracks human rights violations. "There's
a dark cloud hanging. And we are not really sure what that dark
cloud is going to bring. There could be an eruption of new violence."
Human rights organizations and the opposition party, the Movement
for Democratic Change, point to worrying signs. About one month
ago, 14 MDC activists and a toddler were detained by state police
in pre-dawn raids, the party said. Their whereabouts are unknown,
according to Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights. Luke Tamborinyoka, an MDC spokesman,
said eight of about 2,000 bases used by the ruling party, the Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front, or Zanu PF, to carry out
violence during the campaign have recently been manned again, perhaps
in anticipation of new elections if the power-sharing negotiations
fail.
Mukoko said
her organization had received similar reports and surmised that
Zanu PF forces were "waiting for some sort of signal."
Most concrete, Mukoko said, is a recent surge in reports of harassment
and intimidation, mostly against MDC loyalists. According to her
organization's monitors, who compile reports from civic groups across
the nation, nearly 750 such incidents were documented in September,
323 more than in August. The September report
said that opposition supporters have been forced to pay fines, interrogated
for celebrating the power-sharing deal, denied government-funded
food rations and threatened with evictions. In about 10 percent
of all incidents, the report noted, the perpetrators have been MDC
supporters for whom it is "payback time."
Ephraim Masawi,
a deputy national spokesman for Zanu PF, denied reports of ongoing
political violence and intimidation and said the party's bases -
which he said were used for campaigning but not torture, as human
rights activists allege - are shuttered. "We have never encouraged,
condoned or supported violence against the MDC," Masawi said.
Of the bases, he said, "Why should we re-establish them now
when we are going to have elections in 2013?" In Zaka, where
the MDC won several parliamentary seats held by the ruling party,
tensions remain high. Harrison Mudzuri, who barely captured one
of the posts, said intimidation of his supporters is "rife."
But the supporters, he said, are simmering with anger at the neighbors
who they say carried out the attacks and should be punished. The
power-sharing deal does mention prosecution of perpetrators. "Truly
speaking, the issue of amnesty is not in our vocabulary," Mudzuri
said.
Tsumele, his uncle said,
was campaigning for what MDC supporters thought might finally become
a reality: a victory that would deliver democracy to Zimbabwe and
international aid to help Zaka, a drought-stricken area in southern
Zimbabwe, where most people are subsistence farmers and survive
on donated food. Instead, a gang of gun-wielding Zanu PF supporters
came to the opposition office in the tiny town of Jerera at 3 a.m.
They shot one young man, forced the others onto the ground, sprinkled
them with fuel and lit a match, Mudzuri and witnesses said. Tsumele,
his clothes in flames, ran more than two miles to a hospital, then
spent five months recovering at a hospital in Harare. Three people
were killed. Though months have passed, the incident remains fresh
in Zaka. Lawrence Tsumele said he cannot count the number of times
his Zanu PF neighbors have told him they are "not done"
with his family.
Alice Chigudu,
Tsumele's mother, said an old woman recently sneered at her MDC
T-shirt and said, "That's why you were burned." "We
are very bitter," Chigudu, 45, said quietly, speaking inside
her thatched-roof hut. "If I see someone with a Zanu PF T-shirt,
I get very angry and agitated. At times, tears run down my cheeks."
But she smiled as she explained that her side is not simply taking
the harassment. Many are demanding the return of chickens and grain
they say were stolen by opponents before the elections, she said.
And at an August party in honor of a deceased ancestor, she said,
she watched as about 20 MDC loyalists beat a Zanu PF supporter so
badly that he was "taken away in a wheelbarrow." "It
was revenge," she said. "It was one of the perpetrators
of violence before the elections. So the MDC supporters were avenging
for his evil deeds." From his bed, where he listens to a radio
and pages through a 1986 issue of National Geographic magazine,
Tsumele said he would like to do the same to Mugabe. "Tsvangirai
should be in power!" said Tsumele, his face wrapped in bandages,
his burned skin wrinkled and scarred. "It is very unfair."
Edison Gwenhure, 28,
who also survived the fuel attack, speaks with less confidence.
To get from one place to another, he zigzags through the dusty countryside,
avoiding the homes of ruling party backers he fears might abduct
him. Gwenhure sleeps at relatives' homes at night, "so that
if anything happens, it will happen in the eyes of others,"
he said, his gaze cemented to the ground as he fiddled with his
shoelaces. A few weeks ago, Gwenhure said, he was sitting in a shop
in Jerera with a friend when two older men passed by. He recognized
them as Mugabe supporters. They laughed at his burns. "One
said: 'That is not enough. We should have done something worse,'
" Gwenhure said. Before June, he had a bicycle-repair business.
But he had to abandon it because his hands were deformed by fire,
and his left foot, shot at by one of the attackers, is missing four
toes. Last year, he harvested corn. This year, as is the case across
Zimbabwe, there is no seed. He gets by on the charity of relatives.
Gwenhure said he does not regret campaigning for the MDC, and he
thinks a political solution still could come. But he is worried.
"Our hope has been dashed off. We were hoping that things would
normalize and get better. Now we are desperate," he said. "And
the situation can get worse. Violence could return."
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