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Violence, recrimination and arrests after policeman's death in Glen View - Index of articles
Cry
woman cry, cry beloved Zimbabwe
Grace
Kwinjeh
July 07, 2011
"Another
weekend in for my child, is that it??? Cynthia was picked up from
her town residence, not in Glen View, and she was never in Glen
View, why, why is this happening to my child and why to her little
boy?? How do I tell a little boy that he can't see his mother because
she was arrested
for no crime at all??-- Anna Manjoro.
The above are
the cries posted on the social networking site, Facebook, by Mrs
Anna Manjoro, Cynthia-s mother. Cynthia is one of the 24 Glenview
residents accused of killing a police officer, Petros Mutedza
. Above is the shrill cry of anguish coming from a mother and grandmother
for her daughter, Cynthia, who has left behind a son to whom she
has to explain the 'criminal- enormity of his mother-s
arrest.
Problem is there
is no criminal enormity here! Only, perhaps, a coldly calculated
'political enormity-. An eerie cloud of premeditated
spitefulness that hovers ominously over Cynthia and three other
women who have been transferred from the female section to the male
one at Chikurubi Maximum prison - a holding centre for the most
vile and dangerous criminals.
The psychological
impact is unimaginable!
Just to prove
where the real deception behind the arrests of the 24 lies is the
fact that Cynthia herself, even the police admit, has not committed
any offense, but her arrest is meant to 'lure- her boyfriend
who, as they allege, is also behind the killing of the police officer
in Glenview.
Anna-s
cries are deep from Zimbabwe-s own belly, mourning for her
beloved children.
Arbitrary arrests,
torture, hate speech - you name it - characterize a relentless campaign
by President Robert Mugabe-s acolytes in the top echelons
of the army, police and intelligence to intimidate and instill fear
in an otherwise restive population. This unfortunate group, it should
be noted, is not the first since Zimbabwe-s independence to
endure the brutality of similarly seeming mindless incarceration
as a result of trumped up charges.
When political
temperatures rise, women and children are the most vulnerable. But
who cares?
Scars are still
fresh from the violence
of the 2008 Presidential election run-off. A woman from Manicaland
Province states in a December, 2010 study commissioned by the Research
Advocacy Unit (RAU), No
hiding place: Politically motivated rape of Zimbabwean women,
"When I woke up the following morning on the 26th of June
2008, they had put a skirt on me and a ZANU PF T-shirt, I had blood
all over my skirt and my thighs were swollen. My vagina was full
of semen; I had wounds and cracks from being raped continuously.
I could not walk because my legs were swollen." The grisly
forms of violence, endured by hundreds of women, through out the
country during this dark period are well documented.
It may seem
as if this is no longer the time to dwell on what some might feel
to be petty struggles fought in high density suburbs like Glen View.
It may, however, certainly be claimed, in some quarters, that the
focus is no longer on the ability of the working class (or struggling
women, on a more specific note) to mobilize and liberate themselves,
and that now the focus has shifted onto the regional and African
elites- political will to offer leadership that will liberate
Zimbabweans from a long time ally and friend of theirs.
It is patently
clear that Zimbabweans are in danger of becoming mere pawns in an
uninspiring regional dance exhibiting the drearily dispiriting rhythm
of one step forward and two steps back. As an illustrative point,
the dire political problem has now been removed from the agenda
of the SADC organ on security and politics, and is not likely to
feature that prominently at the ongoing African Union Summit being
held in Equatorial Guinea.
One does not
need to go very far in search of where Zimbabwean women have been
located in the current political discourse, a quick media scan,
or an equally quick perusal of the recently adopted SADC resolutions,
exposes the gender-exclusive, political context in which the country-s
future is once again being defined.
It is simply
problematic that the recent, and much celebrated as being progressive,
SADC resolutions do not contain in them any clause that even tacitly
mentions the peace and security of Zimbabwe-s women and children,
such as Cynthia and her little boy.
Given that election
time in Zimbabwe is always a season of an increased tempo - in hate-speech,
political violence (you name it) - this is just a serious oversight!
It has been
just recently, and our ears are still ringing from the impact, that
we have been exposed to the explosive public statements of Brigadier-General
Douglas Nyikayaramba against Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, which
are a chilly reminder of the prevailing lawlessness - a mouth-drying
threat to the security of ordinary Zimbabweans. And dare I remind
one and all that women and children have always borne the brunt
of such rabid lawlessness. It was the securocrats that coldly planned
and executed the diabolic free-for-all abuse of women experienced
in 2008.
May it also
be noted that Nyikayaramba-s statements also revealed, as
never quite in the same manner before, that now power in Zimbabwe
is more vested in the securocrats than in State House.
It is therefore,
demonstrably foolhardy, to conclude that security sector reform,
which featured prominently among the SADC leaders recently, (given
more clear and fresh evidence that the ailing President Robert has
ceded power to the 'securocrats-, as represented by
the Central Intelligence Organization, the military, and the police)
will have an impact on the ground, without real commitment from
the regional leaders to implement and execute noticeably workable
plans to protect civilians.
And so while
the Zimbabwe issue has been removed from the SADC troika-s
agenda, greater responsibility now lies in the hands of facilitator,
South Africa-s President Jacob Zuma, to take up urgent issues,
such as the human security of women who are daily suffering from
Zanu PF-s violent politics.
It is my belief
that unless issues to do with women-s peace and security are
not dealt with at the highest level, there is much cause for fear,
that they will remain the silent battered victims, of Mugabe-s
brutality. I will not go into the Lancaster House agreement but
rather just look at the country-s recent history under the
Government
of National Unity and how the women-s agenda to assert
their rights has remained on the fringes of democratic discourse.
A crude example,
for instance, is how much women have struggled to be heard in the
constitutional reform process under the Constitutional Parliamentary
Select Committee (COPAC), in which women-s voices have been
muted on key issues, such as land ownership, or how Zanu PF has
sought to subvert the women-s voices through indoctrination
at grassroots levels on how they should respond to issues that affect
them.
On their part,
the women should be applauded for putting together an election roadmap
which was presented to the SADC secretariat by the Women-s
Coalition. It covers broadly, from a gender perspective, key
issues of central importance if a free and fair election is to take
place. These issues include: constitutional reform, legal reform
and reform of repressive legislation. It also includes demands to
an end to politically motivated violence.
In this regard,
the women are demanding an end to the culture of impunity and also
that the state should ensure full security of women and girls. Political
parties must commit to non-violent campaigning and desist from hate
speech in accordance with the GPA.
Speaking at
an international conference, on women and peace building, held in
Harare earlier this year, Professor Mirjam van Reisen, Tilburg University
Department of Humanities and also Director of the European External
Policy Advisors (EEPA): "Women in Zimbabwe are united in their
quest for peace. They demand that all political parties respect
women. They ask that all political parties must put in place mechanisms
to stop violence."
The role of
women in peace-building and conflict-resolution is enshrined in
the SADC Gender Protocol, article 28 which states that: '-
State Parties shall endeavour to put in place measures to ensure
that women have equal representation and participation in key decision-making
positions in conflict resolution and peace building processes by
2015 in accordance with United Nations Security Council Resolution
1325 on Women, Peace and Security."
While, in general,
international legal documents are clear on paper, in terms of women-s
participation in conflict resolution, implementation on the ground
remains problematic. It is patently clear that the SADC discussions,
both in Livingstone
and Sandton,
have been a high stakes negotiations game to rescue Zimbabwe from
fast sinking into an ugly political quagmire. One is, however, compelled
to also caution that failure to include, for specific attention,
more than half the country-s population is, in our day and
age, not only callously inexcusable but also an oversight that could
see Zimbabweans sink even faster into the quick sand of autocracy,
greed and violent politics.
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