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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
Zimbabwe:
Security forces pose election risk
Human
Rights Watch
June 05, 2013
http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/06/04/zimbabwe-security-forces-pose-election-risk
Zimbabwe’s
“unity
government” should carry out reforms to ensure that state
security forces conduct themselves in a non-partisan and professional
manner before the country holds national elections in 2013, Human
Rights Watch said in a report released today.
The 44-page
report,
“The Elephant in the Room: Reforming the Security Sector Ahead
of Zimbabwe’s Elections,” describes how Zimbabwe’s
military and other security forces have interfered in the country’s
political and electoral affairs in support of President Robert Mugabe
and his political party, ZANU-PF, preventing Zimbabweans from exercising
their rights to free expression and association and to vote. This
was particularly evident during the June 2008 presidential
run-off election, when the army committed widespread abuses
including killings, beatings, and torture. Since then, the leadership
of the military, police, and internal security agency, the Central
Intelligence Organization, has remained unchanged and openly supportive
of Mugabe.
“With
the security forces right up to the top leaders threatening and
attacking Mugabe’s perceived opponents, Zimbabweans have little
faith in the upcoming elections,” said Tiseke Kasambala, Africa
advocacy director at Human Rights Watch. “Zimbabwe’s
unity government is going to have to rein in the security forces
and keep them out of politics if the elections are going to have
any meaning.”
Since the creation
of the unity
government in September 2009, several senior military officials
have publicly expressed support for Mugabe and ZANU-PF and denigrated
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC). As recently as May 1, Police Commissioner
General Augustine Chihuri publicly said that the security forces
would never meet with Tsvangirai to discuss security reforms and
that anyone who reported on or raised the issue risked arrest.
Then on May
4, the Zimbabwe Defense Forces commander, Gen. Constantine Chiwenga,
similarly told the state-run weekly The Sunday Mail that he would
not meet with Tsvangirai to discuss security reforms: “We
have no time to meet sellouts. Clearly Tsvangirai is a psychiatric
patient who needs a competent psychiatrist.”
The partisan
statements by the security forces leadership are reflected in actions
security forces are taking on the ground, Human Rights Watch said.
On May 7, police arrested Dumisani Muleya, editor of the Zimbabwe
Independent, and Owen Gagare, its chief reporter, after the newspaper
published an article saying that Tsvangirai had met with the heads
of the security forces. The police interrogated the two men and
detained them for eight hours, then charged them under the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform) Act with “publishing or
communicating false statements prejudicial to the State.”
Human Rights
Watch investigations found that the Zimbabwe National Army has deployed
soldiers across the country, intimidating, beating, and otherwise
abusing perceived supporters of the MDC or those critical of the
government. At times these soldiers have used food distribution,
community school projects, and even an “army history research
project” to obtain entry into various communities.
On March 17,
a day after a referendum on the new constitution, five armed soldiers
in uniform approached an MDC supporter at Mataga Growth point, Mberengwa,
in Midlands province, and demanded to know if he had voted “yes”
in the referendum. The MDC supporter told Human Rights Watch:
When I said
I had voted
in favor of the draft constitution they then asked me why I
was wearing an MDC t-shirt and before I could respond they began
to punch and kick me all over my body. They said I must vote for
ZANU-PF in the coming elections without fail or they would come
back for me.
Human Rights
Watch has documented and received reports of abuses in Buhera, Nyanga,
Chipinge, and Mutare in Manicaland province; Gokwe, Zhombe, Mberengwa,
and Silobela in Midlands province; and Chivhu, Marondera, and Uzumba
in Mashonaland East province.
“Zimbabwe’s
laws and constitution require neutrality and impartiality from the
security forces but the security forces have shown no sign of meeting
their obligations,” Kasambala said. “The government
needs to send a clear message by disciplining and prosecuting security
force personnel and soldiers who violate the law for political reasons.”
The unity government
should take urgent steps to ensure the political neutrality of Zimbabwe’s
security forces, Human Rights Watch said, with support from the
Southern African Development Community (SADC), the regional body
consisting of 15 southern African countries.
The government
needs to investigate and prosecute alleged abuses by security force
personnel. It also needs to publicly direct the security forces
leadership to carry out their responsibilities professionally and
impartially and to appropriately punish leaders who don’t.
“SADC
should make improving the behavior of the security forces a key
pillar of the Zimbabwe roadmap to credible, free, and fair elections,”
Kasambala said. “The coming elections are an important step
in ending the country’s longstanding human rights crisis.”
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