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ZCTU National Labour Protest - Sept 13, 2006 - Index of articles
ZIMBABWE:
Concern over physical condition of arrested marchers
IRIN News
September 18, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=55609
JOHANNESBURG
- Rights groups and union leaders have united to condemn Zimbabwe's
government and police for allegedly beating and torturing demonstrators
arrested during nationwide
marches against the country's fast-deteriorating social and
economic conditions.
At least 500 people were
arrested last week according to Zimbabwe's largest labour federation,
which organised the protests. An IRIN correspondent in the capital,
Harare, witnessed armed police severely beating demonstrators with
batons prior to the marches, which were declared illegal and quickly
suppressed by President Robert Mugabe's government.
Amnesty International
said it was "gravely concerned" by reports that several
members of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) were beaten in police stations
in Harare after being arrested.
"Hundreds
of members of the ZCTU and women's organisation, Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), are also reported to be detained in
Harare and other urban centres in Zimbabwe," Amnesty said in
a statement. "Members are being held without access to lawyers,
adequate food and medical care ... There are serious concerns for
the health and safety of all those held."
The Zimbabwe
Human Rights Forum (ZHRF), a coalition of 16 rights groups,
said the president, vice-president and secretary general of the
ZCTU were all violently arrested at the protests and subjected to
"serious torture". All three sustained severe injuries
while in police custody.
"Torture
in Zimbabwe is both widespread and systemic, demanding both a national
and an international response," the ZHRF said in a statement.
"The Human Rights Forum demands the release of all the detained
members of the ZCTU, the immediate investigation of all allegations
of torture and the prosecution of all those guilty of torture."
Zimbabwe's economy is
in freefall, with hyperinflation above 1,200 percent annually and
unemployment estimated at up to 80 percent, although the country's
Central Statistic Office maintains the actual unemployment rate
is 11 percent. Staple foods are scarce, electricity supply interruptions
frequent, and about 83 percent of the population live on less than
US$2 a day, according to UNAIDS. Mugabe has blamed the country's
deepening problems on domestic and international opponents opposed
to his fast-track land reform programme, which saw white-owned farms
seized for settlement by landless blacks.
Opposition protests and
mass-action campaigns against the government have often stalled
at the starting blocks. Mugabe, Zimbabwe's only leader since it
won independence from Britain in 1980, warned critics last month
that the army was ready to "pull the trigger" on those
seeking to topple him.
On 13 September, marchers
voiced demands for a living wage for workers, access to antiretroviral
(ARV) treatment for HIV-positive people, and an end to police harassment
of "informal economy workers". The protests were declared
illegal and snuffed out by thousands of armed police.
The two-million member
strong Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), a consistent
critic of Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party government, called for international
pressure to ensure the release of all trade unionists detained during
the marches.
"In particular,
we are deeply concerned at the news that one of those arrested,
Wellington Chibebe, the ZCTU secretary-general, has been admitted
to hospital with a fractured arm and bruises on his head,"
COSATU said in a statement. "We demand the immediate release
of all those arrested, the dropping of all charges, and disciplinary
action against police officers found to have been responsible for
the beating and torture of detainees."
The South African government,
sticking to its widely criticised stance of "quiet diplomacy"
towards its northern neighbour, has refused to condemn the Mugabe
government for the way it has handled the protests.
"We are monitoring
developments with interest, but we always maintain that Zimbabwe
needs to address its own problems and nobody can solve those problems
for them, and it would be arrogant for us to pretend we could,"
foreign affairs spokesperson Vincent Hlongwane told IRIN. "We
are communicating with them and are in constant contact, but not
with the aim of dictating to them ... Zimbabwe can deal with its
own problems more effectively."
Zimbabwe's main opposition
party, Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), hobbled by internal
squabbling and a split in October last year, condemned the Mugabe
government and said protests would never be stopped by force and
intimidation.
"We are appalled
by the fact that terrorism and violence are being used by the state
against its own people," said Nelson Chamisa, spokesman for
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai's faction. "We applaud the actions
of the people of Zimbabwe for sending a message to the government.
The regime is panicked and cannot maintain its position ... Last
week's actions are only a sign of what is to come."
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