| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Face-to-face
with Mugabe's dungeons
Davison Maruziva, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
May 10, 2008
View article
on the Zimbabwe Standard website
I hadn-t
met Lovemore Matombo for a serious engaging discussion since the
1980s. Then he was with the union for workers in the postal and
telecommunications sector. Since then he has risen to the helm of
the country-s most powerful labour movement, the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU). Parallel to this rise, his
rhetoric has mellowed and become more measured. We met in the interrogation
office at the Law and Order section of the CID at Harare Central
police station on Thursday last week. I was being charged in my
capacity as editor of The Standard under the provisions of the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform) Act which deals with publishing
or communicating a false statement prejudicial to the State and
contempt of court. The two charges arose from publication of an
article by MDC leader Professor Arthur Mutambara entitled, A
Shameful Betrayal of National Independence. I recalled an incident
in January 2001. A government minister called The Daily News, days
before it was picketed by so-called war veterans and Zanu PF supporters.
This was his warning: "You think we (read the government) are
afraid of the MDC? . . . it is you who give currency to their ideas
by publishing them . . ." If my assessment is correct, then
the strategy behind my arrest is to cow the independent media from
reporting on the political violence and internal displacements blamed
largely on Zanu PF, its supporters, youth militias and State security
agents. This view is confirmed by the arrest last week of Howard
Burditt, an accredited Reuters cameraman for possession of a satellite
phone.
Matombo and the ZCTU-s
secretary-general, Wellington Chibebe, were being charged with inciting
workers during their May Day addresses. We shared our cell with
five other much younger suspects, who consulted Chibebe and Matombo
on the current situation. The presence of the ZCTU leaders appeared
to reassure them and was a source of inspiration to the younger
suspects, boosting their resistance to the regime. But it is precisely
this that could endanger the lives of the ZCTU leaders. Several
things struck me: the presence of professional officers, on the
one hand and that of decidedly rogue elements in the police force
on the other; the treatment of suspects; decay in facilities such
as collapsing ceilings; absence of water and lack of equipment as
manifested by the continued use of typewriters that would proudly
grace an exhibition of the history of writing equipment. Matombo
was pointing out to his deputy, Japhet Moyo, and I, the complex
within Harare Central police station, where in 1970s he was tortured
by one black officer with the Special Branch, precursor of the Central
Intelligence Organisation, when in walked one menacing piece of
God-s creation in the form of an officer, who interrupted
Matombo, offering, unsolicited, a chilling account of what happens
at the Law and Order Section. He used the term "break"
or "crush" in Shona, as the treatment meted out to suspects
brought to the section. He suggested that if one found a "thief
in one-s house the thief should be prepared for the consequences".
We were alarmed.
Matombo was appalled - especially after the experiences of the labour
movement-s leaders in September 2006. I recalled that in the
late 1990s the late Kempton Makamure, then at the University
of Zimbabwe and other lecturers, spent their time offering lectures
on issues of human rights and their observance to officers at the
Police Staff College. I wondered whether this particular officer
had ever been through such training or was a mere "graduate"
of the Border Gezi system. He was to hover around and in and out
of the interrogation office, presumably with the intention of "striking
fear in our hearts and minds". He provided a sobering study
of post-independence law enforcement. I wondered about the Police
Service Charter, attempts to modernise the police and whether these
measures were doomed to fail. Even though several institutions have
benefited from government computers, the police still rely on ancient
typewriters. Maybe this is part of a deliberate ploy to ensure the
process of recording statements is drawn out, thereby increasing
anxiety in the suspects.
Attempts by
our legal counsel Arthur Mutsonziwa of Atherstone & Cook, Advocate
Deepak Mehta and our Group CEO Raphael Khumalo to secure my release,
even into the custody of our lawyers for my court appearance the
following day - Friday - were thoroughly frustrated. Eventually
they were informed the "decision to detain me overnight had
already been made". Upon insistence they were told the instruction
was from the Attorney-General-s office. Chibebe, Matombo and
I were taken to the holding cells. There, we met some of the finest
and most professional of officers. Then to the dungeons. At night
we were herded into the cells. We had agreed - Chibebe, Matombo
and I - that we would remain together and look after each other.
The only form of lighting was in the stairway. The cells were pitch
black; there was no water, certainly for the duration of my stay
there and the cells were heavily infested with fleas and other creepy-crawlies.
We spent the night standing in order to minimise contact with the
walls or the "beds". It is probably part of the humiliating
punishment for suspects. But there is a health time bomb waiting
to explode. However, our worst fears were confirmed when the officers
for the morning duty came to open our cells on Friday. Chibebe,
Matombo and I were accused of mobilising other suspects into challenging
the officers. As a warning, three other suspects were beaten. The
use of excessive force was chilling. While I was granted bail on
Friday, I fear for Chibebe and Matombo, because one of the four
officers threatened them dire consequences.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|