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Treason charges against Munyaradzi Gwisai & others - Index of articles
Sixteen
nights in police custody for treason charges: Interview with Masimba
Gorejena
Upenyu
Makoni-Muchemwa, Kubatana.net
March 09, 2011
Masimba Gorejena*
is one of the recently released detainees arrested for attending
a meeting organised by the International
Socialist Organisation.
What
were you thinking when you were arrested?
I came to the conclusion that the government is in a state of panic.
[With] the events that are taking place in North Africa, they wouldn't
want such a situation here in Zimbabwe.
Were
you prepared to be arrested?
It's not the first time I've been arrested, but honestly
speaking I was not prepared to be detained at this particular juncture.
I knew the implications of such activities here in Zimbabwe, I knew
that ZANU PF is in a state of panic, recollecting previous activities,
the demonstrations in February which were stage managed just to
send a message that 'if you dare try to do this, the state
will deal with your decisively'. I knew where such activities
would take me. But I was not ready I was not prepared for now. But
we had to face reality because we needed to discuss such issues
from an intellectual point of view and then would could map a way
forward.
What
were the conditions like in remand?
They were quite bad. Imagine a situation where about 400 inmates
are forced to stay together in a closed space, there is a higher
probability of diseases spreading from one person to another and
also the place is infested with lice. Even the food there is just
boiled. The one thing I liked was that the treatment that we got
from the security personnel, they tended to sympathise with us.
It left me with so many questions, like 'so who is there to
defend the regime?' if the security personnel sympathise with
us.
Earlier
you mentioned that among those of you who were arrested you formed
a bond. Can you tell me more about and how that helped you through
you detention?
I met some of the detainees for the first time at the meeting, and
then going through such a situation together, naturally a bond is
formed, a bond of solidarity. Let's say one is badly affected
by the situation, and someone else is not so badly affected, they
will help and encourage each other. By the second week were much
more united, we could now discuss our social lives, our families
and so forth. We spent a lot of time together getting to know one
another.
What
was your reaction to the surprise charge of treason?
I was very surprised to hear the prosecutor announcing that we were
facing treason charges. At the police station (when we were arrested),
we were made to understand that we were facing a charge of subverting
a constitutional government and the state was struggling, through
the police, to justify that charge on us. We had thought they were
would drop that charge and probably use POSA:
unlawful gathering because there was no substantial evidence. On
the first day when we going to court we first had to go to the Attorney
General, who told the police that they lacked evidence to support
the charge of subversion. We were convinced that they would drop
that charge and use a lesser one. In court when we heard the prosecutor
give the charge of treason we were shocked. Some of the detainees
actually [lost control of themselves] on our way back to remand.
The sentence associated with Treason, a whole life in prison or
death, it broke a lot of peoples' spirits, to think that they
could no longer envision a future for themselves.
How
did you feel when the judge dismissed the charges against you?
I was happy I was being released. But as a comrade who had fought
for many years with some people who are still in custody I had some
solidarity with them. I had thought that we would be together until
the end of this thing. Politically, my conscience tells me that
I need to be with them.
What
was the effect of your detention on your family?
I am not formally married, but I have a young daughter. I want to
thank those who donated things that went to them. The issue is more
psychological than economic, they were being given some money to
sustain them while I was detained. That psychological trauma of
missing a person in your family, I think that played a critical
role, they were affected by my absence. My daughter didn't
know I was detained, the day I left we told her I was going to Mutare,
so up until Monday, she thought I was still in Mutare.
In the
long term has this detention strengthened your resolve?
This does not change anything in terms of my determination for the
struggle. Rather I consider it a college, this is the first time
I've been detained for such a long period of time, I consider
it a lesson, that sometimes the state can be very brutal to you
if you are a threat to them. Next time we need to change tactics,
we don't need to always be in jail, there are good and bad
tactics with repercussions. But we can't just leave it like
it is now.
*not his
real name
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