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Arrest, arrest, and a beating: it's daily life in Zimbabwe
Jan
Raath, The Times (UK)
December
07, 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,6-2490969,00.html
The audience in
the cinema in Bulawayo was distressed, said the German Ambassador.
Pius Ncube, the outspoken Roman Catholic Archbishop, was quite emotional.
Paul Themba Nyathi, the articulate opposition figure, had just been
charged with inciting the Armed Forces to rise against Robert Mugabe,
the President of Zimbabwe. Police had intercepted pamphlets that
he and a party worker were distributing, which criticised the Government's
failure to ensure their welfare . "They are struggling to pay for
food and health and education because they are poorly paid," it
said. He could get 20 years in jail.
The reason for
the audience's distress, though, was the film they were watching,
Sophie Scholl: The Final Days. Miss Scholl was also arrested
for distributing pamphlets that criticised the Government over its
reckless military policies. Only it was in Munich, in 1943, and
the pamphlet was about the Wermacht's casualties at Stalingrad.
She was guillotined.
"It was the echo
that was so disturbing," the ambassador said. The film won first
prize in the local film festival, probably because of that, he said.
Here it comes again.
Miss Scholl's
father was jailed after a workmate reported him for making a critical
remark about Hitler; just like Bassanio Chikwiriri in Gwanda, who
remarked in a bar that Mr Mugabe was the architect of Zimbabwe's
economic collapse. He got three months - suspended.
That's all that
seems to happen these days, arrest, arrest, arrest, usually with
a beating, for the crime of inciting revolt or insulting the President,
which seem to be the same thing. A word, a gesture out of line is
hammered flat when it's barely spoken. Last week four street actors
in Bulawayo were performing a skit on hunger and queues. They were
arrested and beaten up. No one in the commuter minibuses in Harare
opens his mouth any more because of the likelihood of a Central
Intelligence Organisation plant among the passengers.
"Die Sonne
scheint noch," (the
Sun still shines), Miss Scholl said before they cut off her head.
Like-minded Germans had an Allied invasion to look forward to, but
Zimbabweans are content with lesser victories - such as Charles
Zinyembe after he staged a demonstration in the small, dangerous
town of Rusape with a placard saying, "Mugabe must go". Which Mugabe?
The magistrate asked, and bravely acquitted him.
Or the elderly
white man caught cursing the President under his breath as he left
a Harare supermarket, which is what most people do, in shock at
the latest surge in prices. He sped off before the police could
stop him, and they couldn't track him down at the central vehicle
registry because the records were in chaos. He got away with it,
and those who heard the story rejoiced in their hearts.
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