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Zimbabwe's wounds far from healed
Media Centre
April 08, 2011
Heal
Zimbabwe held a memorial service for the victims of the June
2008 pre and post election
violence at the Dutch reformed church located at corner Samora
Machel and Leopold Takawaira avenue in Harare on 6 April 2011. The
memorial service brought together church pastors, government, civil
society and family members of those who where killed during that
period.
The memorial
service which was organised by Heal Zimbabwe ran under the theme,
"Blessed are the peace makers", Matthew 5 vs 9. The
church took a central role in spreading a message of peace, hope
forgiveness and justice. Pastor Magaya who led the sermon, lamented
at the propagandist murmurings of politicians on the contentious
role of the church in politics, where the President is on record
saying that the church has no place in politics, and that their
political dealings would attract political reactions. He said that
politicians always say that the church has no place in politics
in order escape any form of rebuke on their misdeeds from the clergy.
He argued that the church and politics are inseparable, and used
the story of Ezekiel in the bible to support his position.
Hon. Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai who was also present at the service decried Zimbabwe's
endemic culture of impunity where perpetrators of violence have
been and are going unpunished. He said that there are victims of
violence all over Zimbabwe including bodies of Tonderai Ndira and
others. "There are graves in Matebeleland and Midlands of
innocent victims of meaningless genocide and we all wonder whether
the current exhumations will spread to that part of the country
as well," said Tsvangirai. We are angry because perpetrators
are walking scot-free, Joseph Mwale the alleged culprit in the gruesome
murder in of Tichaona Chiminya and Talent Mabika in the year 2000
is still an employee of the state. Mwale is a living example of
a culture of impunity that has afflicted this country which is a
testimony of the failure of the justice delivery system, said the
Prime Minister.
Close relatives
of the deceased struggled to hold back tears as they gave chilling
accounts of how their loved ones disappeared, the state they were
in their death, what they died for and how the families they left
behind were eking out a living without any assistance from the people
whom they worked with. Some of the children left behind by the deceased
have had to drop out of school.
The service
was held in memory of Abigail Chiroto, Cain Nyeve, Better Chukuruma
,Godfrey Kauzani, and Tonderai Ndira who are among the estimated
200 people killed during the violent prone June 2008 runoff election,
another moment of madness in Zimbabwe's history.
In an act of
remembrance, the whole congregation led by the Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai and his Deputy lit candles while Pastor Magaya led in
prayer. Unveiling of tombstones was conducted at Warren Hills cemetery
where the deceased are laid to rest.
The memorial
come against a backdrop where the Organ on Healing and National
Reconciliation has failed to do anything tangible with regards to
fostering national healing and reconciliation that they are so wrongly
named after. Recent attacks on civil society organisation epitomised
by the arrest
of Crisis
Coalition Director Macdonald Lewanika and the harassment
of Mr Abel Chikomo, the Executive Director of the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum (the Forum resulted in the convening
of a press conference by civil society). In their joint
statement, civil society organisations called upon the police
and all other state agents to stop attacking the messenger and to
start attending to the message.
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