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The struggle continues
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
May 24, 2006

"The second war is a political war of tyranny, operation and greed designed to dispossess the people of their rights and their wealth and subject them to abject poverty, slavery, dehumanization and extinction — the wars, waged against a defenseless and small people, amount to genocide and are a grave crime against humanity." Ken Saro-Wiwa(1995) - A Month and a Day: A Detention Diary, pg148

17 students from the National University of Sciences and Technology are still languishing in the police cells in Bulawayo after their clash with the establishment yesterday. The student leadership from Zimbabwe National Students Union (ZINASU) remains adamant that their struggle for education will continue countrywide despite the arrests and detentions. Midlands State University and University of Zimbabwe student leaders have vowed to join their fellows at NUST in resisting such anti-poor education policies.

The protests that started in paucity are swelling bigger by the lapse of each day. The Zimbabwe Student Christian Movement (ZSCM) has joined in the struggle, issuing a statement warning that the "new fee structures would spark civil unrest akin to the 1999 food riots". This was premised of the basis that most students come from peasant backgrounds where such sums of fees may leave no option but withdrawal to a bulk of students.

Meanwhile, approximately 130 women from Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) are still detained in the police cells in Harare after the release of more than 100 others in Bulawayo. The 130 WOZA members have entered their fourth day in the filthy prison cells for demanding their right to "flowers and bread" (basic needs) on the annual Valentine's Day. The Women were manhandled, harassed and beaten up before being militantly thrown into police lorries.

The Herald of Friday, 17 February 206 reports that cases of baby dumping and abortion are on the increase in Harare, and the city authorities calling for women to have "morals" and stop the practice. This said increase in baby dumping follows council's pegging of maternity fees at $16million (160US$) on a people whose average income is less than 30US$ per month. Increased baby dumping is therefore not a moral issue but an economic issue and such naivety on the party of government is shocking. In fact, it is an insult on women, especially poor women. The government suggests that poor women must not conceive- a pure and intolerable attack on their dignity.

The Zanu PF house of oppression is crumbling. As the legend human rights activist, Ken Saro Wiwa rightful pointed out, that the people will fight back for their political, social and economic space- it is happening as people reclaim their rights.

As Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, we rationally locate the economic and social crisis in Zimbabwe largely as a governance failure. The prescription lies in political reform where Zimbabwe writes a new democratic constitution on whose base, nagging socio-economic and political issues will be addressed. Arrests, torture and detentions may avert protests some day, but not certainly reconstitute the pride of Zimbabwe.

Visit the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition fact sheet

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