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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Another
violent loss for Zimbabwe's opposition
Stephanie
Nolen, Globe and Mail
May 24, 2008
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080523.zimbabwe24/BNStory/International/home
The first time
the Zimbabwe police arrested Tonderai Ndira back in 1998, he didn't
resist. In fact, he was smiling when they crammed him into a tiny
prison cell with other democracy activists, and his comrades asked
him why.
"He said
we had to be strong because we were going to see such things,"
Reuben Tichareva, who has been one of Mr. Ndira's closest friends
since the age of 5, recalled yesterday. "He said such arrests
will become a routine thing as the struggle continues."
Indeed they did. Mr. Ndira was arrested so often over the next decade
- 35 times in all - that his friends and family started
to believe he was invincible. No matter how long the police held
him, or how much they beat him, he emerged alive and gentle and
suffused with enthusiasm to educate people about the need for political
change.
Because Mr.
Ndira led with such dignity and courage, "we called him our
Steve Biko," Mr. Tichareva said, in a reference to the legendary
South African anti-apartheid activist. And now he and Mr. Biko have
something else in common: Mr. Ndira, too, has been viciously slain
in his early 30s.
He was dragged from his
bed by six armed men on May 13, beaten savagely in front of his
wife and two children, and stuffed into an unmarked car.
His body, or most of
it, was found Wednesday on the other side of town.
Mr. Ndira was part of
a group of young people who helped found Zimbabwe's opposition Movement
for Democratic Change in 1999. But he had been politically active
long before that, campaigning for the rights of people in Mabvuku,
the slum neighbourhood where he grew up, then pushing for a democratic
constitution as the regime of President Robert Mugabe grew increasingly
autocratic.
Mr. Ndira rose through
the ranks of the MDC, and for the past few years had served as an
irrepressible "advance man" for party leader Morgan
Tsvangirai.
His slaying, and that
of four other young MDC leaders in the past 10 days, is widely believed
to be the work of pro-government forces that have launched a ruthless
campaign to cripple the opposition as it tries to prepare for a
runoff presidential vote on June 27.
Mr. Tsvangirai is to
return to Zimbabwe today, despite threats to his safety, in part
because he is determined to attend Mr. Ndira's funeral. However,
it is not yet clear that the government will allow the funeral,
scheduled for today, to go ahead.
>From the time he
was a child, Mr. Ndira stood up against the abuse of power. Girls
who went to school with him remember him for intervening when boys
taunted them. He abhorred violence. "He would say, 'We
are not fighting people, but the system,'" Mr. Tichareva said.
Mr. Ndira had been in
hiding since a wave of state-sponsored violence began after it became
clear that Mr. Mugabe's ZANU-PF party had lost the March 29 election,
for the first time since Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980.
His family at first sought
safety in rural areas, but when the violence moved there, they came
back to Mabvuku. Last Tuesday night, a worn-out Mr. Ndira sneaked
home to see them.
Shortly after dawn, as
he lay sleeping, six men in dark glasses burst into the house. One
put a pistol to the head of Mr. Ndira's wife, Plaxedess Mutariswa,
who was in the kitchen, and ordered her to be quiet and show them
where her husband was.
Mr. Ndira awoke as they
burst into the room, and for once, he did not go willingly. "One
of them said, 'Let me hit him' and dragged him out of the
room," Ms. Mutariswa said, weeping. "They started hitting
him. He started screaming for help. As they were busy hitting him
I tried to run for the door to call for help but I found another
man with a gun on the door. He said, 'Just let a word out
and I will blow your MDC head off.'" The men, believed to
be agents of the Central Intelligence Organization, carried Mr.
Ndira out to the car. His children Raphael, 10, and Linity, 7, watched
from the doorway.
"They threw Tonderai
into the car as he pleaded with the people around him to help save
his life," Ms. Mutariswa said. She saw two of the men sit
on her husband to keep him down inside the car as they drove off,
saw another stuff a cloth into his mouth and blindfold him.
"When they took
him, I could feel a shiver down my spine," said Ms. Mutariswa.
"I have seen police coming to take him 35 times, but this
time something in me told me that there was something very wrong."
The family tried without
success for a week to get information from the authorities about
where Mr. Ndira had been taken.
On Wednesday, a team
from the MDC went to Harare's largest hospital to claim the bodies
of a pair of activists from the mortuary. The staff person on duty
told them there was another body, found on a farm outside the city,
which had not been claimed and suggested they try to identify it.
It fell to Mr. Tichareva
to do that job. "It was horrific: his face had been crushed
and I could see a maggot on the left side. His left eye had been
removed, his nose was damaged, his tongue was missing. He had two
holes, one just below the ribcage and the other just near the heart.
His body was black with bruises. The murderers had used his boxers
to cover his face."
In fact, Mr. Tichareva,
he would have been unable to say this body was his friend's, but
for the bangle he always wore on his left hand.
Ms. Mutariswa, who lapsed
frequently into racking sobs at the wake, described how, years ago,
she tried to dissuade her husband from politics.
As she spoke, more than
100 people gathered outside the house, singing and drumming in what
became one of the largest opposition gatherings since the election.
Mr. Ndira's brothers emerged defiantly from hiding to attend; inside,
their mother could only sit and keen.
While those who gathered
in Mabvuku for his wake yesterday vowed to fight on in his name,
they also said they didn't know how they could carry on without
his leadership. "We can only say we will try, but I don't
think we can match that level where Tonderai had taken this to,"
Mr. Tichareva said.
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