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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on enforced disappearances in Zimbabwe
Woman
journalist freed after being held for three months
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
March 03, 2009
Reporters Without Borders
hails yesterday's release of journalist and human rights activist
Jestina Mukoko and urges the authorities to free freelance photographer
Shadreck Manyere, who is still being held.
"Mukoko was unjustly held for three months in very disturbing
conditions," Reporters Without Borders said. "We are
extremely relieved to know that she is free at last, but her ordeal
will not be fully over until the authorities drop the charges against
her. Her release, just a few weeks after the formation of a national
unity government with the opposition, will hopefully be the starting
point of a new government attitude of respect for free expression."
Mukoko was freed on payment of 600 US dollars (476 euros) in bail
and her passport was returned to her. "It is good to be free
but being detained was an ordeal and I must look after my health,"
she said, adding that she would talk to the media later.
Her lawyer, Beatrice Mtetwa, said: "It is good she has been
released, but she is still restricted. She has to report to the
police and the charges against her are still in place although she
knows she did nothing."
A former presenter for the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation and
then the privately-owned Voice of The People, Mukoko now heads the
Zimbabwe Peace
Project, a human rights organisation. She was kidnapped from
her home in Norton (40 km west of Harare) on 3 December by some
15 men in plain clothes. Initially held incommunicado, she was brought
before a judge for the first time on 24 December.
Placed in solitary confinement in Chikurubi high-security prison,
Mukoko was mistreated and tortured and denied the medicine she takes.
Security agents allegedly punched her and hit her repeatedly with
sharp instruments, including on the soles of her feet, and made
her kneel naked on gravel.
Charged with hatching a "terrorist plot" against President
Robert Mugabe, Mukoko was alleged to have recruited volunteers to
receive military training in Botswana with a view to overthrowing
the government.
Kidnapped by government agents on 13 December, Manyere was brought
before a Harare court on 7 January on charges of banditry, sabotage
and terrorism, for which he faces a prison sentence ranging from
20 years to life. The authorities accuse him of involvement in the
bombings of the Criminal Investigations Department headquarters
in Harare and Manyame bridge in Norton on 17 November and the bombing
of Harare central police station on 20 November.
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