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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
Zimbabwean
crisis at a glance
Colleen Henderson
May 28, 2008
Presidential
run-off
The runoff date for Zimbabwe's presidential election is Friday 27
June.
SADC
peace keepers
At a press conference on his arrival in Zimbabwe on Saturday 24
May, Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai called
for peacekeepers and election monitors from the 14-member regional
body SADC to be deployed in Zimbabwe by the end of May.
Death
toll in post-election state-sponsored violence
MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa says that according to the party-s
records, 50 MDC members have been killed since the March 29 elections.
(25 May 2008)
Zanu-PF is targeting
influential MDC activists in the rural areas, in the past week those
who have been killed were chairmen, polling agents and village heads.
This is a deliberate strategy to weaken the structures of the MDC.
The abductions of political
and civil activists have intensified in the last week as ZANU-PF
continues its campaign to destroy opposition structures ahead of
the presidential runoff. We have received reports that nearly 20
people have been abducted since Friday. (SW Radio May 28 2008)
Estimated
number of displaced people / communities (Zimbabwe)
The
MDC estimates that over 25 000 people in former strongholds of Zanu-PF
have been forced to flee to neighbouring towns and cities.
Morgan Tsvangirai says
Zanu PF has launched a violent campaign against its supporters in
a bid to avoid another defeat next month. (Reuters 28 May 2008)
The MDC MP elect for
Mbare, Piniel Denga, has endorsed the call for the deployment of
election observers and monitors immediately to ensure that those
displaced by the violence can go back to their areas.
Estimated
number of homes destroyed
By
mid May, more than 1 000 homes had been destroyed. One of the most
calculated acts of cruelty by this regime, one of their tried and
tested tactics, is to destroy food supplies. In a country which
needs food aid for an estimated 4.1 million people (out of an estimated
population of 7-8 million), Zanu PF loyal thugs have burned piles
of maize. One of the affected areas is Uzumba.
Post-election
state sponsored violence a deliberate strategy
The post election state sponsored violence is a deliberate strategy.
It has been carefully planned by Mugabe, his deputy Emerson Mnangagwa
and the 15 or so senior military police and intelligence officers
in the Joint Operation Command (JOC), which now runs Zimbabwe.
Their intention is to
intimidate the supporters of the opposition so that they either
cannot, or are too afraid, to vote in the run-off elections . . . .
Through illegal methods,
including the torture and blackmail of abducted opposition activists,
Zanu-PF has obtained a list of all the polling agents and leading
activists who work on behalf of Morgan Tsvangirai and the MDC.
Now, village by village,
town by town, it is embarking on a savage campaign to eradicate
them all. (Daily Mail) 15 May 2008).
In tandem with
this eradication process is the strategy of displacing thousands
of voters, notably from areas which voted for Morgan Tsvangirai.
Voters are only allowed to vote in the constituencies where they
are registered.
Extreme brutality of attacks
The victims
of violence have been killed using some of the most vicious techniques,
including cutting off of genitals, limbs, hands, legs and various
other body parts. Bludgeoning of victims to death using steel bars,
axes, sticks, gun butts and other blunt objects has been common.
Every week the MDC is reporting its activists being murdered and
providing evidence of the killings. Doctors have confirmed in medical
reports that most of the victims -- at least 45 so far -- died after
"severe assaults". (Business Day 26 May 2008)
Attacks
on women, children and the elderly
Zanu-PF militia is kidnapping
children and women. The purpose of the abductions is to force
husbands and fathers to return to their villages, where they face
beatings and torture by the militia for being MDC supporters. Several
of the women who have been abducted have been subjected to sexual
harassment, torture and assault. According to the Zimbabwe
Peace Project (ZPP), many hundreds of men have fled the rural
areas to seek safety in the cities. (Reliefweb)
A heavily pregnant
woman who was three months away from giving birth was bludgeoned
to death in a 'horrific, brutal and frenzied attack-
that left her almost unrecognisable. Rosemary Maramba-s body
was found in Nhakiwa village in Mutawatawa in Mashonaland central.
Maramba is one of three people linked to the MDC, who were murdered
in the area over the weekend. (SW Radio Africa 22 May 2008)
Clergy
- Catholic priests in hiding
Many
Catholic priests and lay people are reported to be on the wanted
lists of soldiers and militia groups and many are forced to remain
in hiding following death threats. Reprisals come after the Catholic
Church joined with other denominations on 8th May to speak out about
the country-s deteriorating human rights situation, including
the "organised violence" in areas that did not vote
for ZANU PF. (ACN News 26 May 2008)
Media
threats/violence
The
Zimbabwean Newspaper: The Zimbabwean reports that a 14-tonne truck
containing 60,000 copies of Sunday-s edition of The Zimbabwean
on Sunday was intercepted and set
alight on Saturday night south of Masvingo. The driver (a South
African national) and his partner (a Zimbabwean national) were severely
beaten with rifle butts and dumped separately in the bush. The Zimbabwean-s
passport was confiscated and burnt.
Sky TV: Zimbabwe police
have arrested three people, two of them South Africans, in connection
with "illegal broadcasting equipment" for British television
network Sky TV, state radio said on Tuesday. It said the three were
detained at the weekend in the western city of Bulawayo.
ICJR: The New York-based
International Committee to Protect Journalists said the regime was
one of the world's most hostile governments to the media.
Electoral
issues
Last week the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission filed an urgent
application in the High Court chambers seeking an order to destroy
ballot saying they want to re-use the boxes for the run off election.
ZEC chairman Justice Chiweshe argued that due to financial constraints
the commission cannot afford to buy new boxes and seals. In terms
of the Electoral
Act ballot papers should not be destroyed for a total of six
months after the election.
The MDC reported that
the Zanu PF government has instructed town clerks and executive
officers running rural and urban councils not to cooperate with
the newly elected councillors from assuming office until after the
second round of the presidential election scheduled for June 27.
SADC
Tribunal in Windhoek - landmark farm test case
THE
landmark application brought before the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) Tribunal in Windhoek by Zimbabwean commercial farmers
will be heard at the Supreme Court in Windhoek, Namibia, today.
The case is set for hearing 28 to 30 May.
Marches
/ rallies
Over
2 000 people marched on the streets of Johannesburg on Saturday
24 May in a protest over the recent spate of xenophobic attacks
that have claimed approximately 44 lives with the majority being
African migrants.
Xenophobic
attacks on foreigners in South Africa
According
to Human Rights Watch, since the attacks on African migrants started
11 May, they have claimed over 50 lives and displaced more than
25,000 people, in addition to thousands forced to return to their
countries.
The Red Cross said on
Monday 26 May 2008 that an estimates 25 000 Zimbabweans were fleeing
the xenophobic violence in South Africa were heading to Zambia with
others moving to Mozambique and Botswana.
Safety and Security Minister
Charles Nqakula told the BBC 56 people had been killed and more
than 650 injured. Previously, 50 deaths were reported. He also added
that more than 30 000 people had been displaced, 1 300 arrests have
been made and special courts had been set up to deal with the situation.
The Red Cross
in South Africa is currently caring for 25,000 destitute people
who had been driven from their homes around Johannesburg and Pretoria,
the hotspot of the unrest.
Zimbabwe-s
Movement for Democratic Change party hired at least 1 000 buses
to transport refugees affected by the violence back home.
SADC / African Union
SADC
peacekeepers: On 10 May the MDC met with Angola's President Jose
Eduardo dos Santos and urged him to send regional SADC peacekeepers
for the second round.
On 14 May 2008 the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) said that conditions in Zimbabwe
were not conducive for a free and fair second round presidential
election but rejected opposition calls to send peacekeepers claiming
that Zimbabwe was not at war and there was no need to put up a standby
Peace keeping force.
Retired South African
Archbishop Desmond Tutu has urged the international community to
deploy peacekeepers in Zimbabwe to prevent disturbances during a
presidential run-off poll next month between President Robert Mugabe
and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Access by international
observers: Zimbabwe-s state media reported Western countries
would be barred from observing a run-off election unless they remove
the targeted sanctions imposed on key members of the Mugabe regime.
New Zealand
is adding its voice to international calls for an immediate end
to state-sponsored violence and intimidation in Zimbabwe.
"It's essential
that international monitors be allowed into Zimbabwe to deter further
violence and to monitor the second round of voting for the presidency,
scheduled to take place on 27 June," Foreign Minister Winston
Peters said.
"These
attacks must end. Unless the violence stops it will be very difficult
to hold the second round of voting, and the result will be an election
that is neither free nor fair," Mr Peters said. (New Zealand
Government Press Release Wednesday, 28 May 2008, 12:58 pm.)
ZEC: "The run-off
is a full election and just as big as any general election, so the
resources that we need are obviously substantial. Some of the resources
were depleted during the first election, so we need more time to
prepare for the run-off." (Zimbabwe Election Commission Chairperson:
Justice Chiweshe)
Post-election
violence - Operation Mavhoterapapi
After
the 29 March 2008, Zanu PF members and supporters launched a crackdown
against MDC supporters. Calling the operation 'Mavhoterapapi-
(Operation where did you put your X), the objective is to 're-educate-
people and force them through terror tactics to vote for Zanu PF
in the Presidential run-off.
Zimbabwe
Peace Project (ZPP) Report
- 20 May 2008:
4 359 cases of human rights violations documented. ZPP notes that
patterns of violence have shifted and violence has become more physical
as evidenced by an increase in cases of assault, murder, malicious
damage to property, and kidnapping.
Confirmed
injuries (including the most serious): The ZADHR
has reported that
the number of victims targeted in this post election period has
now totalled over 900. In one 24 hour period, 30 victims of violence
were treated for limb fractures in Harare hospitals and clinics.
One hospital in Harare alone has treated an average of 23 victims
a day over the last week. On May 8, there were a total of 53 more
seriously injured patients (13 men and 40 men) admitted to wards
in 3 Harare hospitals. (ZADHR Statement 9 May)
In a 're-education-
session in Mashonaland Central, the Human Rights Watch confirmed
that two men had died on the spot. Three of those who died had severely
mutilated genitals, one of whom had crushed testicles. Reports confirm
the deaths were a direct result of the injuries sustained under
torture.
Confirmed
injuries - the elderly, women and children: This
month a 3-year-old boy was admitted to hospital with trauma to his
right eye after being struck with a rock and a 78 year-old man who
sustained a fractured lower leg due to blunt trauma. A young breast-feeding
mother had bilateral fractures of her hands and was unable to hold
her baby to feed her. A 79-year-old widow, a great-grandmother and
former nurse aid, was lashed on her bare buttocks with barbed-wire
whips in front of terrified relatives. They were told that if none
of them confessed (to being MDC supporters) they '"would
hit this granny until she died."
Displaced people: A minimum of 40 000 people in
Zimbabwe have been displaced although the MDC believes that this
number could be much higher.
Number
of homes destroyed: More than 1,000 homes burnt or destroyed.
Note: It is believed that Zanu PF-s objective is to displace
at least 500 000 eligible voters, perceived to be MDC supporters,
ahead of the runoff.
In Masvingo Zanu PF youths set fire to a house and a car worth trillions
of dollars belonging to a Gutu resident magistrate Musaiona Shotgame,
whom they accused of being sympathetic towards the MDC activists
who had appeared before him in court.
Worst affected areas: Mashonaland East and West
provinces. Reported incidents of violence are also on the increase
in Harare.
Current hot spots: Manicaland recorded the highest
number of incidents with a total of 1924 incidents of violence in
the month of April. Of these cases, 823 involved displacement and
over 400 cases of harassment and intimidation, 251 cases of assault.
Two cases of murder were also recorded in the province.
Food
aid: The National
Association of Non-governmental Organisations (NANGO) said President
Robert Mugabe-s government has told relief agencies to handover
food and other humanitarian assistance to state organs for distribution
to victims of political violence.
Farm
invasions: The President of the Commercial Farmers Union
(CFU) Trevor Gifford reports that since the election polls, the
Zanu PF militia has invaded 45 farms, but 37 of the affected farmers
had since returned to their properties. (Zimbabwe Independent 22
May 2008)
Educational
crisis: The Progressive
Teachers- Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ)-s Secretary General
Raymond Majongwe said that at least 464 schools had closed their
doors since the beginning of May, due to mounting violence. About
5,000 teachers are said to have fled, leaving around 260,000 children
without instructors.
International
statements on the violence: UN humanitarian agencies and
their partners in the NGO [non-governmental organisation] community
have been experiencing limited access to the affected people due
to this heightened tension and localised outbreaks of violence,
resulting in the scaling-down of humanitarian programmes, thereby
exacerbating the humanitarian situation.
Fact-finding
missions
South
Africa: Senior members of the investigating team said their findings
were "alarming" and that most of the violence was state
sponsored, although in certain instances opposition parties had
also retaliated.
Africa:
Swaziland MP Marwick Khumalo told the House that the Mission had
communicated concerns twice to the Chairperson of the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission (ZEC). The Mission recommended to the House that the
situation in Zimbabwe be 'closely monitored-. He also
added that 'high-level political mediation- was now
imperative.
International: US ambassador Mr James McGee said that threats would
not deter the US ambassadorial mission. 'We are eager to continue
this type of thing, to show the world what is happening here in
Zimbabwe. It is absolutely urgent that the entire world sees what
is going on. The violence has to stop.' He later stated: "After
the tour, we now have concrete proof to show the world about violence
taking place in Zimbabwe. There is urgent need to stop what is happening.
Violence has to stop. From the small sample we have taken it is
clear that violence is perpetrated on MDC supporters."
Activities - Zimbabwe
Rallies
/ marches: About 20 000 MDC supporters attended the White
City stadium victory rally to show support for President Morgan
Tsvangirai in the run-off election to be held on 27 June 2008.
Demonstrations:
According to a Women
of Zimbabwe arise (WOZA) official, riot police beat the 50 members
who were protesting on 5 May 2008 in Bulawayo. 11
members of WOZA were also arrested.
Activities
Africa
On
World Africa Day Sunday 25 May the African Civil Society organisations
planned to commemorate Africa Day with a show of solidarity for
the people of Zimbabwe. They dubbed the campaign "Stand
Up (For) Zimbabwe" Day. The International Campaigns coordinator
for Treatment Campaign Regis Mtutu said that there could not be
an Africa Day when the people of Zimbabwe are not enjoying their
rights.
Activities
- South Africa:
Rallies/marches: About a hundred members of the
Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) and other organisations
picketed the gates of Parliament in Cape Town on Saturday 17 May
to protest against rising food prices and call for freedom in Zimbabwe.
Also on 17 May a Cosatu-organised
march was held in central Johannesburg to protest against the past
week's xenophobic attacks in Gauteng townships, as well as high
food prices and the crisis in Zimbabwe.
Fundraising
activities:
25 May
2008 (Saturday): A team from the Jesuit Missions was due to participate
in the Edinburgh Marathon, the Hairy Haggis Relay, hoping to raise
awareness regarding the drastic situation in Zimbabwe, as well as
to try and raise funds for the Makumbi mission in Zimbabwe.
Refugee
issues:
The South
African Police have said that 42 people have been killed in the
violence in Johannesburg that has lasted for more than a week. 16
000 people have also been displaced. In the SABC news it was said
that 9 000 Mozambicans have crossed the bridge back to Mozambique.
To curb the situation
from escalating the South African President Thabo Mbeki has given
permission to the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) army
to be deployed in areas hit by xenophobic attacks to give assistance
to the South African Police Service (SAPS).
Freedom Front leader
Pieter Mulder said that the deployment of the army was as acknowledgement
by President Mbeki that there was 'a state of emergency-
in South Africa.
SA Home Affairs: South
Africa's Deputy Minister of Home Affairs Malusi Gigaba admits that
the attacks have bought shame on his country.
Home Affairs spokesman
Mansele Tau announced that Home Affairs is not deporting anyone
and that they will assist those who voluntarily want to go home
with their paperwork.
Economic
crisis in Zimbabwe
Inflation
has surpassed that of all other nations with recent reports that
it has doubled. Year-on-year inflation for the month of March surged
to 355 000% from the February figure of 165 000% .
An Independent financial
assessment on Tuesday reported that annual inflation rose this month
to 1,063 572 percent based on the price of a basket of basic foodstuffs.
Economic analysts say
unless the rate of inflation is slowed, annual inflation will likely
reach about five million percent by October.
Z$185 million=US$1.
In the formal market and Z$145 million=US$ 1 in the parallel market
Z$400 million = £1
Humanitarian
crisis in Zimbabwe
Unemployment: Estimated at 85%
Life expectancy: Women: 34 years (was 57 years
in 1994). Men: 37 (was 54 years in 1994)
Food crisis: The World Food Program estimates that
45% of the population is malnourished.
Healthcare: Healthcare has virtually collapsed
and the hospitals are in a desperate state. Mission hospitals in
particular are struggling to cope with the huge numbers of people
brutalised in the rural areas.
Death rate: An estimated 3,500 Zimbabweans die
every week from the combined effects of HIV/AIDS, poverty, and malnutrition.
Half a million Zimbabweans may have died since 2000, while more
than 4 million have fled the country and now live in neighbouring
states or overseas.
Destroying the Opposition - Operation Murambatsvina
and Operation Mavhoterapapi
Operation
Murambatsvina (winter 2005) - post-parliamentary election: This
government-initiated operation destroyed the homes of an estimated
700 000 mainly poor urban people - predominantly opposition
MDC supporters. According to United Nations estimates, more than
2.4 million people were affected. Operation Murambatsvina also resulted
in the destruction of at least 32 500 small and micro-businesses
across the country, creating a loss of livelihood for more than
96 600 people, mostly women.
*Operation
Mavhoterapapi (winter 2008) - post parliamentary and presidential
election: This government-initiated crackdown has to date made more
than 5 000 families homeless.
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