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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Zimbabwe's
terror
Washington Post
May 08, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/08/AR2008050802879.html
Will no one act to stop
Robert Mugabe's attack on his own people?
As the world looks on,
Robert Mugabe's campaign of terror against the people of Zimbabwe
continues unchecked. On Thursday, The Post's Craig Timberg reported
that gangs from Mr. Mugabe's ruling party beat 11 opposition activists
to death on Monday in the town of Chiweshe, 90 miles north of the
capital of Harare. The same day, at least five people were murdered
by the president's thugs in the village of Dakudzwa, according to
reporting by the Los Angeles Times. Across the country, truckloads
of men are pulling into rural villages and towns that voted against
Mr. Mugabe in the March 29 elections, rounding up opposition supporters
for beatings or worse and burning their homes and crops.
The opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, which won both the presidential
and parliamentary elections, says that at least 32 of its supporters
have been killed by the government offensive in the past two weeks.
The Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights says about 700
people are known to have been treated for injuries. The General
Agriculture and Plantation Workers Union says
that as many as 40,000 farmworkers and their families have been
driven from their homes.
Even observers sympathetic
to the Mugabe regime have confirmed what is going on. "We have
seen it, there are people in hospital who said they have been tortured,
you have seen pictures, you have seen pictures of houses that have
been destroyed and so on," said Kingsley Mamabolo, the leader
of an eight-member South African fact-finding team, according to
the Zimbabwe Guardian newspaper. Mr. Mamabolo's group was dispatched
by South African President Thabo Mbeki, who has emerged as the principal
obstacle to international intervention in Zimbabwe's crisis.
Mr. Mbeki, who
is supposed to be mediating on behalf of the Southern African Development
Community (SADC), has done nothing to stop the violence, despite
rising outrage in his own country. Nor has he pressed Mr. Mugabe
to accept the results of the elections. The 84-year-old president
permitted his election commission to release the results of the
presidential race only last Friday, more than a month after the
vote. Officially the incumbent was awarded 43 percent of the ballots
to 48 percent for challenger Morgan Tsvangirai, making a second
round necessary. The opposition claims that Mr. Tsvangirai won with
more than 50 percent of the vote. In any case, Mr. Mugabe's men
are saying that they won't schedule the second round within the
three-week time frame required by the constitution
-- and may delay it by up to 12 months.
In the meantime, Mr.
Mugabe clearly intends to terrorize the country into voting for
him. Only intervention by Zimbabwe's neighbors or the United Nations
is likely to stop him. It is past time for the SADC to relieve Mr.
Mbeki of his duties and demand that Mr. Mugabe immediately end the
violence. The U.N. Security Council, which was blocked by South
Africa from formally considering the matter last month, is now chaired
by Britain; it should urgently consider action, including a resolution
ordering Mr. Mugabe to cease repression and allow international
supervision of any second-round vote.
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