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Release illegally detained human rights activists
Amnesty International
November 08, 2012
Three human
rights defenders who are being illegally detained
by Zimbabwe's police must be immediately and unconditionally
released, Amnesty International said today.
Fidelis Mudimu,
Zachariah Godi and Tafadzwa Geza were arbitrarily arrested after
police raided their offices in Harare on Monday and have since been
illegally transferred more than 400km to Bulawayo.
The three men
are senior staff members of the Counselling
Services Unit (CSU) a registered medical clinic which provides
medical and counselling services to victims of organized violence
and torture.
Under Zimbabwean
law detainees must be brought before a magistrate and formally charged
within 48 hours or released.
"Amnesty
International regards all three of these men as prisoners of conscience,
arrested solely for their legitimate work assisting victims of torture,"
said Noel Kututwa, Amnesty International's southern Africa
director.
"This
flagrant bullying and intimidation of human rights defenders in
Zimbabwe must end."
Amnesty International
believes that the unlawful detention of the three men is part of
a pattern of systematic harassment and intimidation of civil society
by the government as it attempts to stifle dissent ahead of elections
in 2013.
This is the
second raid
on the office of an NGO in Harare in less than three months. In
August the office of Gays
and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ) was raided by police twice and
members were arrested and detained.
"We fear
that these men, who are highly respected for their work with survivors
of human rights abuses, may themselves become the victims of torture,"
said Noel Kututwa.
On Monday morning
about a dozen police officers arrived at the CSU without a search
warrant. Around two hours later they were joined by a truckload
of anti-riot police who threatened to fire tear gas into the clinic
when staff and patients refused them entry.
The police eventually
produced a search warrant stating they were there to recover "offensive
and subversive material". During the search they seized confidential
medical records, a computer and documents which were not covered
by the search warrant, and arrested the three men.
On Wednesday
afternoon, at around the time they should have been charged or released
under Zimbabwean law, the men were transferred
464 kilometres to Bulawayo having been reportedly told they were
wanted by police there on charges relating to the subject of the
search warrant. The CSU have no offices or premises in Bulawayo.
"The illegal
transfer was made by bundling these men into an open pick up truck
without protection from the sun, in spite of the long journey in
temperatures exceeding 30 degrees Celsius," said Noel Kututwa.
"The Zimbabwe police have once again demonstrated a modus
operandi that falls far short of acceptable standards for police
conduct and shows no regard whatsoever for the welfare of those
in their custody," said Noel Kututwa.
"This
situation is indicative of the Southern Africa Development Communty's
(SADC) failure to enforce reform of the security services in Zimbabwe
as agreed in the Global Political Agreement. SADC must urgently
act to stop this ongoing harassment and intimidation of civil society
organisations in Zimbabwe."
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