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Report
on politically motivated human rights and food related violations
- September/October 2009
Zimbabwe
Peace Project
November 27, 2009
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Overview
The report has
a bi-monthly focus, covering the months of September and October.
The period under review
witnessed resurgences in acts of politically motivated human rights
violations. A breach toll of 1986 was recorded, 931 of which were
cases recorded in September while 1055 were cases recorded in October,
both months showing huge increases in the harassment and assault
categories. Harassments and assaults accounted for 1587 cases of
the total violations recorded, scenarios that cast a bad omen for
the country's human rights profile.
2793 people were recorded
as victims, the bulk [1513] being members of the MDC T while 730
were Unknowns, 529 ZANU PF, 19 MDC and 4 State. This trend maintained
when the victim profile was analyzed in terms of gender spread by
party affiliation. Of the 1932 male victims recorded, 1189 were
MDC T, 314 were ZANU PF, 12 MDC, 3 State and 414 Unknowns while
out of the 687 female victims recorded, 319 were MDC T, 66 ZANU
PF, 5 MDC, 1 State and 296 Unknown. This victim spread should be
viewed with utmost concern as within this pool are vulnerable groups
such as the elderly, children, the sick and the disabled.
The period under review
also recorded a figure of 3918 perpetrators, the majority of which
were members of ZANU PF. In fact, of the 3918 perpetrators recorded
in the period under review, 2251 were ZANU PF, 414 MDC T,
10 MDC, 109 State and 111 Unknowns. This trend remained consistent
when the gross figure was analyzed in terms of gender spread by
party affiliation.
These statistical trends
have to be understood within the broader picture of the unfolding
macro level scenarios within the Inclusive Government which throughout
the period under review went through extremely trying times as disagreements
on outstanding issues between its major stakeholders, ZANU PF and
the MDC T continued to widen by frightening margins. The MDC T ended
up adopting the cabinet and council of ministers' meetings boycott
route in a desperate attempt to nudge ZANU PF into action on outstanding
issues.
Analysis of the circumstances
under which most acts were committed in communities [micro level
politics] show close links with macro level politics. Most of the
violations committed in communities derive their inspiration from
the conduct of political business at macro level. In the period
under review, members of the public were victimized for commenting
on most macro level issues such as the MDC disengagement, arrest
of Roy Bennett, changes brought about by the inclusive government.
When macro politics tensed up, members of the public in both rural
and urban communities became highly protective of their political
turf and even quick to resort to violence at the slightest provocation.
Macro level political
dynamics also lent a polarized and partisan approach to constitution
making and national healing programs, members of the public adopting
political rather than issue-based positions on constitutional matters.
Under such obtaining scenarios, ordinary disagreements quickly assumed
political connotations. For instance an ordinary appreciation of
some of the positive changes that have occurred since the formation
of the Inclusive Government were generally interpreted as a snub
on the political party that was in power before the formation of
the inclusive government. For perpetrators it was tantamount to
praising the MDC T.
Cases in which members
of the public were assaulted simply because they were reported to
be associating with their relatives or friends who are members of
other political parties were also a common, an indicator of how
political polarizations have soiled the entire fabric of social
life.
The Kariba
Draft issue continued to distract attention from real constitutional
issues as pro-ZANU PF organizers were at most meetings quick to
take it as an opportunity to instruct villagers to either accept
the Kariba Draft or face unspecified actions.
Scrutiny of
the specifics of most issues reported suggest the need to refocus
human rights monitoring strategies as perpetrators have become more
adept and cunning and quick to frame their political targets by
falsely accusing them of having committed criminal acts such as
cattle rustling. Cases abound where well known victims of the 27
June 2008 elections had tables turned against them by being accused
as perpetrators. In Mutoko, there were reports that victims of last
year's political violence from the Chimoi area appeared before a
Mutoko Magistrate charged with robbery for trying to repossess property
forcibly seized by ZANU PF party supporters. This as reported was
despite that some of them had signed agreements with repentant former
perpetrators who had looted their belongings.
The operational
framework of NGOs in the human rights sector remained severely constrained
with an almost systematic and uniform approach adopted towards them
across the ten provinces. Reports made references to several cases
in which constitution awareness workshops by Zimbabwe
Human Rights Association (ZimRights), National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA) and others were frequent targets
of disruptions by party youths, police and traditional leaders.
Traditional leaders were reportedly under extreme pressure from
war veterans and the local political leadership with several cases
in which village heads were threatened with demotion whenever they
were reported to have given permission to human rights activists
to conduct workshops in their areas. Reports were also common of
cases in which members of the public were summoned to the kraal
heads/chiefs' courts for questioning after they were reported to
have attended or participated in NGO-initiated workshops.
Unfolding scenarios suggest
that forces opposed to the new-order were fast gaining ground and
posing potent threats to the consummation of citizen social, political
and economic basic rights. Fear remained a common feature in both
rural and urban areas.
Since January 2009, a
cumulative violations toll of 12 824 cases have been recorded. Since
January, acts spread have been heavily leaning towards the harassment,
assault, discrimination and displacement categories.
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