|
Back to Index
Early
warning report on human rights and food related violations
Zimbabwe
Peace Project
December 2008
Download this document
- Word
97 version (1MB)
- Adobe
PDF version (577KB)
If
you do not have the free Acrobat reader on your computer, download
it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
Executive
summary
In this end of year Report,
ZPP in line with its fundamental concern for a violence free nation,
continues to identify human rights abuses and forewarn the nation
of incidences that may erode the basis for national peace and stability.
Four months
after the signing of the 15 September 2008 Global
Political Agreement, prospects for an all inclusive Government
remained a will-of-the wisp which the nation fervently chased but
never caught. With each power-sharing talk, differences appeared
to widen, scenarios that left the nation in a state of political
anxiety and uncertainty.
This anxiety was indeed
well founded given that the nation was currently facing a limping
economy with a staggering inflation of around two hundred million
percent and a severely stressed social sector. The health sector
had to grapple with a ravaging cholera epidemic which by end of
December 2008 had claimed around seven hundred lives while in the
education sector, public examinations which were written under severely
compromised conditions are yet to be marked and released, scenarios
that are likely to place the future foundation of the nation up
in smoke.
NGO efforts
at monitoring politically motivated human rights violations in a
bid to nurture and sustain a violent-free society are currently
under siege, their programming activities in epileptic convulsions
amid spates of office invasions and abductions of employees. On
third December 2008, the nation awoke to the sad and agonizing news
of the abduction of Jestina Mukoko, the national director of the
Zimbabwe Peace Project and fiery defender of human rights, reportedly,
by a group of yet-to-be-identified and yet-to-be arrested
armed gang. Disaster struck again at the same organization when
on the 8th December 2008 its two staffers [Brodreck Takawira and
Pascal Gonzo] were abducted in broad daylight by another yet- to-be
identified and yet-to-be arrested law-unto-itself group. Until
December 24, 2008, the whereabouts of the triad was unknown with
the police and state media maintaining a business-as-usual mum stance
over these abductions.
Provincial reports strongly
suggest that politically motivated human rights malpractices still
maintain their earlier observed stubborn retreat trend, imprints
of abuses still dotted in most constituencies, members of the public
reportedly still being harassed, assaulted, abducted, and threatened
with dire consequences for what passes as generally flimsy and petty
reasons like publicly complaining of the hard times, wearing own
party regalia, listening to Studio 7, reading independent press,
belonging to a political party of one's choice, commenting
on delays in the implementation of the 15 September 2008 Global
Political Agreement, condemning abduction of human rights defenders,
among others. In the wake of these spates of nightly and broad daylight
abductions, a growing sense of vulnerability has once more gripped
the nation.
With victims of violence
allegedly disillusioned with the fact that most known perpetrators
of yester violence still roam free with impunity, some communities
and individuals are reportedly celebrating the deaths or misfortunes
of people suspected to have been linked to the perpetration of violence.
In the Nyanga South constituency of Manicaland people reportedly
refused to attend the funeral of a man alleged to have perpetrated
violence in the community while a Bikita East community reportedly
celebrated after the home of an alleged perpetrator of violence
was razed down by a fire, declaring it "well deserved punishment
from God". ZPP deplores these developments and exhorts the
state to take measures that can restore societal unity, social healing
and transitional justice.
Incidents of revengeful
violence remain thinly dotted across the ten provinces. In ward
13 of the Nyanga South constituency of Manicaland, four families
alleged to have taken the lead in terrorising villagers in the area
during the June 27 elections woke up on the 9th of December 2008
to find that their healthy crop of maize had been viciously slashed,
a flier dangling in one corner of the field with the damning retaliatory
message "this is just the beginning of our revenge, you know
what you did to us". ZPP strongly abhors these developments
and once more calls for timely social healing interventions to be
put in place in the name of peace and justice.
With most rural shops
now selling mealie-meal, seed maize and other basic food stuffs
in foreign currency, villagers are reportedly at high risk of losing
their hard earned livestock to unscrupulous politicians and business
people who in some cases are reportedly exchanging a beast for as
low as a 50 kg bag of mealie-meal. This unethical practice, if not
urgently contained, is set to not only reduce the draught power
of rural farmers but also decimate their future source of livelihood
and food security.
Reports of widespread
diversion of both state and NGO donated food and seed maize for
selfish gains by those in strategic and influential positions, if
also not urgently addressed, are set to further worsen the food
plight of the rural farmers. Well into the rain season, most farmers
were reportedly struggling to access seed maize, with one reported
case of a group of villagers who were made to share bag of seed
maize and ending up with a cup of seed maize each!
Download
full document
Visit the ZPP
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|