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Early
warning report: Politically motivated human rights & food related
violations - Mar 2009
Zimbabwe
Peace Project
June 03, 2009
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Overview
The report documents
politically motivated human rights violations one month after the
formation of the inclusive government, particularly focusing on
the extent to which the formation of the inclusive government has
impacted on inter-party violence and food distribution mal-practices
at both the macro and micro levels of society. The Report is presented
in two sections; the first part focusing on politically motivated
human rights violations while the second part documents food-related
human rights violations.
The report is presented
against the background of the untimely death on 6 March of Susan
Tsvangirai [wife to Morgan Tsvangirai, the Prime Minister] in a
tragic road accident along the Harare-Masvingo highway. Given that
this incident occurred at a time when the new inclusive government
had just been formed, a slight political mishap on either of the
leadership of the two main political parties could have sparked
inter-party tension and conflicts across the country.
It is also encouraging
to note that since the onset of the new political dispensation,
some changes have started to show on the macro front. On the economic
front, prices of some basic goods have been stabilising, supermarkets
shelves filling up [although with mostly imported goods] while the
speculative mindset that had gripped business practices in Zimbabwe
is also fast retreating.
The political front has
also been witness to some positive developments, among the most
relevant ones being the release [though on stringent bail conditions]
of most of the 30 political prisoners and human rights activists,
among which were Jestina Mukoko, the Director of the Zimbabwe Peace
Project and the other ZPP staffer, Broderick Takawira. However the
continued detention of the remaining three political prisoners,
seven with their whereabouts unknown- remain a cause for deep concern
as it is against the spirit of the power sharing agreement signed
between ZANU PF and the two MDC factions.
On the administrative
front, a three-tier ministerial set up comprising ministers drawn
from the ZANU PF and the two MDC factions has also been created
to spearhead the implementation of the national healing process
although delays in rolling out the programme to grassroots levels
of society are becoming cause for concern given seething victim-perpetrator
relations across the country.
Equally worrying, are
perceived delays in clearing outstanding issues relating to the
unilateral appointment of provincial governors, central bank governor,
Attorney General and permanent secretaries by the President. The
Zimbabwe Peace Project implores upon the powers that be to speedily
clear these outstanding issues as continued delays on these fundamental
matters may be interpreted as lack of sincerity on the implementation
of the Global Political Agreement. These delays may also send wrong
signals to micro/ grassroots politics.
At grassroots levels
it is generally political business as usual. Political mindsets
of the past and polarizations are visibly manifest and most communities
are still to open space for inter-party participation. Traditional
leadership structures [headmen, village heads and chiefs], the local
ZANU PF political leadership [councillors and district chairpersons],
war veteran structures and even School Development Associations
[SDAs] are reportedly still openly showing reluctance to incorporate
MDC members, councillors and MPs into community development/political
initiatives. It is even distressing to note that in areas where
MDC councillors were elected as local leaders, parallel structures
["appointed councillors"] have been hastily formed in
order to circumvent formal authority structures. Cases where kraal-heads
suspected to be MDC have been stripped of their powers by chiefs
have also been reported with a disturbing frequency.
Barely a month after
the formation of the inclusive government, fixation in grassroots
politics has reportedly shifted to preparations for the forthcoming
elections, developments that are likely to see the inclusive agenda
sacrificed at the altar of electoral politics. Little is being done
at grassroots levels to earnestly explain what is entailed in both
the Global Political Agreement and the inclusive Government. In
fact, in most outreach speeches, the inclusive government agenda
is cast /projected in exclusively transitory terms and thus mistakenly
viewed as a process that is secondary to forthcoming elections.
Also worrisome is that
despite ZPP early warning exhortations on the need to urgently address
issues relating to victim access to remedy, these potentially social
threatening issues are yet to be accorded priority attention, scenarios
that may see communities regressing into theatres of revenge conflicts.
Particularly disconcerting are reports that some perpetrators [allegedly
basking under the protection of the partisan police] remain free,
showing no remorse and even threatening to repeat their previous
atrocities with brazen impunity. Feelings of dejection and rejection
have set in among victims of violence, scenarios that may see some
resorting to own means to get redress. The Zimbabwe Peace Project
recommends that well-thought out reconciliation processes be rolled
out to replace fear by non-violence coexistence, love, forgiveness
and trust within communities. As the nation treads on this delicate
path, it is important to note that long-lasting reconciliation can
hardly be achieved through amnesia, that is, an officially imposed
form of forgetting.
Some state structures
are seemingly yet to recast their mindsets and modus operandi in
tandem with the unfolding all inclusive government dispensation.
Reports from the ten provinces show that the police continue to
selectively apply the Public
Order and Security Act [POSA] to curtail the rights to peaceful
assembly and association of any organization or individual suspected
of being MDC. The law continues to be used to persecute human rights
defenders and political activists and discourage them from exercising
their rights to bail, freedom of association and expression. The
riot police unit of the ZRP continue to use excessive force to break
up peaceful demonstrations by human rights defenders and government
critics.
In white-owned commercial
farms, alleged police and army-led farm invasions, unlawful detentions
of white commercial farmers, issuance of 24-hour eviction deadlines
to farm owners, looting of farm property, displacements of farm
workers and general disruption of farming activities continue with
the fury and lawlessness reminiscent of the jambanja era, police
maintaining their hands-off trademark, the ZANU PF leadership generally
in denial mode while plaintive calls to end these invasions mostly
by the two MDC leadership have been reduced to solo cries of John
the Baptist in the wilderness. Just in the month of March, farms
such as New March and Umfuli Banks farms [in Chegutu East] as well
as Chidza and Nesbitt farms [in Masvingo], among others, have been
invaded.
Political tolerance score
remain disturbingly low and fragile in most communities, reports
generally pointing to cross country incidents in which members of
the public were still harassed, assaulted or threatened with evictions
for petty 'offences" such as different views on politics
and the economy, wearing own regalia, listening to studio 7, attending
own political party meetings, among others. Following the death
of Susan Tsvangirai, reports from across the ten provinces pointed
to incidents in which members of the public were harassed, assaulted
or even threatened with evictions from their communities allegedly
because they had either attended the funeral of Susan Tsvangirai
or merely expressed grief in public over her death. In Buhera West
[Manicland], inter-party violence between ZANU PF and MDC T supporters
flared up immediately after the burial of Susan Tsvangirai leaving
in its wake a trail of destruction in which around ten homes, and
livestock reportedly belonging to known MDC supporters were razed
to the ground.
Against this background
we note with deep concern that despite the formation of the inclusive
government, human rights violations continue to surge with March
recording 1552 from the February recording of 1285. As shown in
the Acts Analysis Graph below, by end of March 2009, a cumulative
toll of 26 529 had been recorded showing substantial cumulative
increases from the January 2008 level of 585.
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