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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Tales
of terror in Zimbabwe
The Washington
Post
April 23, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/23/AR2008042300757.html?nav=rss_world
The beaten,
the battered and the bruised have straggled in from Zimbabwe's terrified
countryside over the past two weeks. And they have set up camp in
Harvest House, a dingy downtown office block that has long been
the headquarters of opposition politics. Now it has the grim, grimy
look of a refugee camp in a war zone.
There are children screaming.
There are adults starving, or stinking for lack of running water.
There are broken bones and bullet wounds and stories of how an election
that millions of Zimbabweans thought might be the end of President
Robert Mugabe's rule has instead produced violent reprisals against
those bold enough to work openly for his ouster.
Martin Mandava, 29, a
farmer from Mutoko, one of many Mugabe rural strongholds that supported
the opposition in the March 29 presidential election, told of how
last week a gang of youths from the ruling ZANU-PF party stoned
him, tied his arms and legs, then beat him with sticks. They gashed
his head with an ax, he said, and threatened to stab his pregnant
wife through the womb. Then the gang leader pulled down Mandava's
pants, grabbed his genitals and held out a knife.
The leader asked the
gang what should be done to an opposition supporter, Mandava recalled.
The answer: His genitals should be cut off, to keep opposition party
babies from being born there.
Mandava's wife screamed
and covered the face of their 5-year-old child, he said. Then the
leader offered to put his weapon away if Mandava could sing a song
from Zimbabwe's liberation struggle, the guerrilla war led in the
1970s by Mugabe. Mandava sang the song.
After four hours of abuse,
he said, the youths burned down a thatch-roofed hut the family used
as a kitchen and left.
"They said my wife
should not try to raise alarm or they will kill her," Mandava
said. "They also bragged that this is what they had done to
other traitors in the area."
Such accounts have become
increasingly common in the 25 days since the historic national vote,
whose results have yet to be released by an electoral commission
run by Mugabe allies.
About 300 opposition
activists are living in Harvest House now. Hundreds of other members
of the Movement for Democratic Change have been beaten, tortured,
falsely arrested or chased from their homes, according to human
rights groups. The MDC says 10 of its members have been killed.
Many usual occupants
of the headquarters, including opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai,
are traveling elsewhere in Africa to seek support for their cause
on a continent that traditionally has avoided interventions against
human rights abuses.
An opinion article in
the state-owned Herald newspaper stirred widespread speculation
Wednesday that elements of Mugabe's ZANU-PF are angling for a political
deal with the opposition, which asserts that Tsvangirai won the
election outright. In the piece, an academic with ties to Mugabe's
party suggested that both sides agree to a government of national
unity led by the president. It would be charged with introducing
a new constitution and organizing new elections.
"The details in
the story do mirror the feeling by some key members in the party,"
said a top government official close to Mugabe, speaking on the
condition of anonymity. "There is a belief that even a runoff
will not help things at all."
There are few visible
signs of an impending deal to break Zimbabwe's political stalemate.
Instead there is abundant and growing evidence that Mugabe, who
has been in power for 28 years, has let loose his army, secret police
and feared youth militias to brutalize the opposition in advance
of a runoff that could be scheduled as early as May.
Some victims are fleeing
into the countryside with their families. Their broken bodies are
filling hospital wards. And some are coming here, to the party's
national headquarters, because they can think of nowhere else to
go.
Most are sleeping in
two large conference rooms, about 40 feet by 40 feet. Crammed into
these squalid spaces are young children, babies being breast-fed
and dozens upon dozens of adults dressed in the only tattered clothes
they have left.
"The number of people
is increasing every day," said MDC deputy leader Thokozani
Khupe, who is attempting to manage the tumult at Harvest House.
"I have received reports that more are on their way to this
place. I don't know what we will do."
Mavis Mavhunga, 65, a
widow, said four ruling party youths came to her hut before dawn
last week to punish her for attending opposition meetings before
the election.
"They said at my
age I must be old enough to know that this country came through
the barrel of the gun. They said I should therefore be grateful"
to the ruling party, Mavhunga recalled.
The youths hit her with
sticks and fists, then pulled up her dress to lash her across the
buttocks. When she fainted, one of the youths poured a bucket of
water on her head to revive her so the beating could continue, Mavhunga
said, weeping as she recalled the pain.
One of the youths then
kicked her arm, breaking it. Two hours into the assault, the youths
burned down her hut and left. Mavhunga said she was so weak that
neighbors had to carry her to the hospital in a wheelbarrow. Her
entire village, she said, is now empty.
Moreblessing Chigadza,
35, said she was working in her field in another village last week,
with her 3-month-old tied to her back, when she saw smoke rising
from her family's compound. Rushing back, she saw her hut on fire
and eight ruling party youths shoving her husband into a white truck
with no license plate.
After the truck sped
away, Chigadza said, the remaining youths ordered her to set the
child aside, then beat her with a motorbike chain. As she tried
to run, she said, one of the men tripped her, breaking her leg.
She has not seen her husband again.
Another party activist,
Takawira Mandere, 34, said he was returning from a political meeting
in a rural town April 12 and wearing an MDC T-shirt when he and
several friends stopped at a store owned by an officer of the secret
police. When the officer demanded that they leave, he said, they
refused.
"He said he was
going to teach us a lesson," Mandere said. "He said the
only way to get order in the area was to kill at least one MDC member
so that the sellouts in the opposition know that ZANU-PF means business."
The officer
shot Mandere in the right leg, then the left. When the officer went
to get more bullets, Mandere crawled away and hid, he said. After
treatment at a Harare hospital, he moved into opposition party headquarters,
where he has been living ever since.
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