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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on enforced disappearances in Zimbabwe
Abducted
journalist & rights activist now faces possible death penalty
on terrorist plot charge
Reportes
Sans Frontiers
December 26, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=29792
Reporters Without Borders
condemns the "unacceptable behaviour" of the Zimbabwean
authorities in kidnapping journalist and human rights activist Jestina
Mukoko three weeks ago, holding her incommunicado and now accusing
her and several other members of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) of a terrorist plot to overthrow President Robert Mugabe.
She faces a possible death sentence.
"The accusations
brought against Mukoko are absurd and baseless," Reporters
Without Borders said. "We call on the Zimbabwean authorities
to free her and withdraw all the charges at once. Coming after a
series of kidnappings, the prosecution of these opposition activists
has all the hallmarks of a government conspiracy to sabotage the
power-sharing agreement."
The Zimbabwean police
brought Mukoko and nine other human rights activists before a Harare
court on 24 December on charges of organising a Zimbabwean police
officer's trip to Botswana to receive military training there
with a view to overthrowing Mugabe. Their lawyers, who have not
been allowed to see them, said they risked being sentenced to death.
The ten activists are
now being held in Chikurubi high security prison although a high
court judge ordered on 24 December that they be taken to hospital.
They are now being held under a pre-trial detention order that will
require renewal on 29 December.
A former presenter for
the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) and then the privately-owned
Voice of The People (VOP), Mukoko was kidnapped from her home in
Norton (40 km west of Harare) at around 5 a.m. on 3 December by
some 15 men in plain clothes. Thereafter, there had been no word
of Mukoko until her court appearance. The police had said nothing,
aside from denying any knowledge of her whereabouts.
Mukoko heads
the Zimbabwe
Peace Project, a human rights organisation that has provided
constant information about this year's political violence
in Zimbabwe, where some 200 supporters of opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai's MDC have been killed since the party's
successful challenge to the ruling ZANU-PF in last March's
general elections.
Refusing to recognise its defeat, the ruling party signed a power-sharing
deal with
the opposition in September but the two sides have failed to agree
on its implementation, in particular, the allocation of key ministries.
Tsvangirai threatened to pull out of the deal earlier this month
after a series of kidnappings of opposition activists.
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