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Anderson
Manyere, "I would only be given two litres of water a week"
IRIN
News
April 23, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=84068
Freelance journalist
Anderson Manyere, 45, was detained in Zimbabwe in December 2008
and released in April 2009, after spending most of his time in solitary
confinement at a variety of police stations, as well as the feared
maximum security prison, Chikurubi, in the capital, Harare.
Manyere was
arrested with two opposition activists: Ghandi Mudzingwa, former
personal aide to Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) and now Prime Minister, and Chris Dlamini, the party's
chief of security. They were all accused of training militias in
neighboring Botswana to topple President Robert Mugabe's government.
Manyere and
the two MDC members were released on 17 April, but 48 hours later
the two MDC members were again arrested and the police are actively
seeking Manyere. On the run, he told IRIN his story.
"When I
was kidnapped by state security agents on December 13, 2008, I did
not think I would ever see my family again because of the manner
that I was abducted by the armed men.
"I was
in my home town, Norton, about 40km south of Harare, when I received
a call from an anonymous caller who said he needed to see me for
urgent business. When I arrived at the scene, two trucks drove up
and sandwiched my car.
"Men brandishing
AK-47 rifles and pistols jumped out, dragged me out of my vehicle,
handcuffed and blindfolded me, before throwing me into the back
of one of the trucks. They forced me to lie down and face downwards."
"While
the state security agents were driving me around, they started torturing
me mentally and emotionally; they did this by playing loud music
by different local musicians.
"One song
is titled, 'You thought you were a hero', another was a funeral
dirge about how death is a final and lonely journey, while in another
song the message is that jails are a place where people die.
"While
in solitary confinement I would only be given two litres of water
a week and some strange leaves, which I had no option but to eat.
I saw fellow inmates who were like skeletons at Chikurubi.
"In between,
I would be tortured through assaults. When they told me that I had
been recruiting people to undergo military training, I told them
they were mad, crazy.
"When they
said they had found weapons at my house, I told them the arms were
theirs, and that they were trying to set me up. They were riled
and even beat me up some more.
"We should
ensure that anybody who violates human rights should get a taste
of their own medicine through the courts.
"It will
take time to forgive or forget."
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