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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
Interview
with Nelson Chamisa, Zimbabwean Member of Parliament
Inter Press Service
June 05, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=42678
Fourteen members
of Women
of Zimbabwe Arise, a Bulawayo-based human rights organization,
are being held in two prisons in the capital Harare. They were arrested
while marching to demand that the Southern Africa Development Community
(SADC) intervene to end post-election violence; their case is just
one illustration of escalating human rights abuses in Zimbabwe.
A leading human
rights lawyer, Andrew Makoni, has fled
to South Africa after receiving credible warnings of a plan to murder
at least one lawyer to deter others from publicizing abuses and
defending victims of state-sponsored violence. According to the
Southern Africa Litigation Centre, four of Makoni's clients have
been murdered in the past two weeks.
Since elections on March
29, at least 22 people have been killed in a campaign of torture,
beatings and destruction of homes that the Solidarity Peace Trust
reports has been carried out by supporters of the ruling Zimbabwe
African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) supporters -- including
war veterans, the party's youth wing and serving members of the
Zimbabwe's security services.
IPS reporter Tonderai
Kwidini spoke with Nelson Chamisa, a Movement for Democratic Change
party spokesperson and member of parliament, who was himself attacked
at the Harare International Airport last year, while on his way
to an international meeting of parliamentarians in Brussels. And
last week four of his family members were also severely assaulted
by soldiers and suspected ZANU-PF militias.
IPS:
What impact the violence has had on campaigning for the June 27
run-off elections?
NELSON
CHAMISA: This is the worst political environment we have
ever experienced in the history of our party. We are fighting a
regime that is staring defeat in the face but is determined to stay
in power and has become desperate. Our supporters are being maimed,
tortured and killed and no one has been arrested. This is a situation
you can only expect to get from a barbaric state.
IPS:
How is the ongoing violence affecting or changing the political
landscape in Zimbabwe?
NC:
The violence has displaced voters. Remember we are going to be using
a ward-based system and lot of our supporters have been forced out
of their homesteads as a result of the violence. It has not just
displaced voters, it has eliminated the electorate. We have over
50 supporters who have been killed since March 29.
IPS:
A recent report
from Solidarity
Peace Trust describes this repression in painful detail. The
report also recommends further mediation and the establishment of
a transitional government. The International Crisis Group has made
a similar recommendation: what is your response to this suggestion?
NC:
It's simple: no one is against the idea of a government of national
unity, because Zimbabwe will need one as it shapes up its nation-building
efforts. But that government can only be chosen by the party that
wins the elections because only then will it have the mandate of
the people.
We are calling on the
international community, SADC, the African Union and the United
Nations to deploy peace keeping forces as well as monitors to come
to Zimbabwe and save the people from ZANU-PF.
IPS:
What is the message you are giving to MDC supporters in the face
of this extreme violence?
NC:We
are just telling them that this is the last hurdle and it is going
to be painful, but it will come to pass. We are telling them to
vote with their conscience -- they have to be strong. This is the
end: we spoke on 29 March and we have to speak again on 27 June.
IPS:
We understand that your political party has been prevented
from holding rallies in certain parts of the country. What has
been the effect of these bans on your political activities?
NC:
You don't have to talk about those bans alone as we have some rural
areas that have been declared by ZANU-PF as no-go areas for the
opposition. Those bans have not only managed to disrupt our campaign
strategies but have given the ZANU-PF regime an edge against us.
The whole idea is to render our party comatose.
IPS:
Can you describe how you are campaigning in this environment?
NC:
Our rallies have been banned, so we are now resorting to doing door
to door campaigns.
IPS:
What needs to be done to make the June 27 elections a free and fair
contest?
NC:
Firstly, there is a need to de-politicise the police force as it
has become partisan in favour of the incumbent. Then there is a
need to create conditions in which all political parties are covered
fairly in both public and private media.
I was in Rwanda recently
and I have learnt a lot about how the media can be used as a tool
to fan violence. The ZANU-PF campaigns on national radio and television
are genocidal and have to be stopped before it's too late.
IPS:
Have you at any time felt a threat to your life as a result of the
crackdown on political freedoms?
NC:
Everyone within the party's leadership is living in constant fear
of being abducted, tortured before being killed. We are now security
animals and we have to be careful. We are dealing with a vampire
regime. But remember: dictatorship is temporary and we are witnessing
the end of Robert Mugabe's tyranny.
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