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Mugabe
defends police brutality, attacks media
MISA-Zimbabwe
September 25,
2006
President Robert
Mugabe has defended the brutal police attacks against leaders of
the Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Unions (ZCTU) despite international condemnation and
increasing demands for full investigations into the assaults which
led to the hospitalisation of secretary-general Wellington Chibhebhe.
President Mugabe
said the ZCTU leaders got the treatment they deserved. He described
the journalists that turned up to cover the planned demonstrations
on 13 September 2006 as "the stupid ones who always write stupid
things". He said the ZCTU leaders had invited the journalists and
some non-governmental organisations to dramatise their act in a
bid to get a "Bush or a Blair" to intervene.
"We cannot have
a situation where people decide to sit in places not allowed and
when the police remove them, they say no. We can't have that, that
is a revolt to the system. If you do not move you invite the police
to use force," said President Mugabe.
Armed riot police
on 13 September 2006 sealed off Harare's CBD and arrested ZCTU President
Lovemore Matombo, vice president Lucia Matibenga, Chibhebhe, senior
opposition MDC official, Grace Kwinje and Raymond Majongwe, the
president of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), among others.
Heavily armed
police patrolled the CBD and sealed off roads leading to Munhumutapa
Building which houses the Offices of the President and Cabinet and
Parliament Building ahead of the planned marches. The security cordon
followed a dire warning by President Mugabe that the government
would ruthlessly deal with any planned mass actions and demonstrations.
Mike Saburi
a freelance cameraperson was arrested together with leaders of the
ZCTU ahead of the planned nationwide demonstrations leading to the
assault of some of the trade unionists in the cells of a condemned
police station.
Saburi, Matombo
and 28 other accused persons were only released on 15 September
2006 after being granted Zimdollars 20 000 (USd 80) bail each when
they appeared in court on initial remand on charges of contravening
Section 37 (1) (b) Chapter 9: 23 of the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform Act) which deals with conduct likely
to breach public peace.
The court heard
how the police brutally assaulted the ZCTU leaders and the other
accused persons some of whom wore slings and had bandaged arms when
they appeared in court. Chibhebhe did not appear in court with the
others as he was admitted at Parirenyatwa Hospital with multiple
head injuries.
The assaults
were so brutal that Matibenga is feared to have shattered her eardrum
during the ordeal.
Some of the
accused had been held at Matapi Police Station whose cells were
condemned as inhuman and degrading by the Supreme Court and made
to walk through raw sewage as they were brutally assaulted one by
one by the police and other unknown persons.
They were also
denied food and blankets during their detention in the unlit bugs-infested
cells. Defence lawyers had to seek an urgent High Court order for
them to get medical attention which the police were continuously
denying them despite representations from their lawyers.
The planned
marches which were slated for 12.30 pm until 2pm on 13 September
2006, had been called to demand for minimum wages and salaries commensurate
with the Poverty Datum Line (PDL), reduction in income tax to a
maximum of 30 percent and that workers salaries below the PDL should
not be taxed.
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