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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
No
painkillers, no visitors and no way out: Mugabe's hospital ward
for MDC activists
Chris McGreal,
The Guardian (UK)
July 14, 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jul/14/zimbabwe.humanrights
Ward B3 of Gokwe general
hospital looks much like any other in Zimbabwe's decaying medical
establishments, denuded of medicines, equipment and doctors by the
country's dramatic economic collapse. But many of its patients are
prisoners in a "torture centre" for abducted opposition
supporters who, on the orders of the army, are denied painkillers
and treatment for terrible injuries sustained at the hands of Robert
Mugabe's henchmen. The opposition Movement for Democratic Change
says that at least 13 of its members are held in the ward. Medical
staff say they are mostly kept prisoner in side rooms. "They
have all been heavily assaulted," said one of the staff. "Some
are burned beyond recognition. Some have broken limbs. They are
in serious agony. They have no drugs. They are not allowed to leave.
When doctors from the outside tried to bring the medicines they
were turned away. So were ambulances to take them to private hospitals
with drugs. It is all on the orders of the army and Central Intelligence
Organisation."
Zimbabweans with a first-hand
knowledge of Ward B3 say an army major called Ronald Mpofu and a
war veteran, David Masvisvi, have ordered medical staff not to allow
the men held there to be moved or permitted access to outside doctors
or visitors. Occasionally the prisoners are visited by intelligence
officers who have photographed and threatened them. Among those
held on the ward is Nomore Jukwa, 23. A mobile phone picture smuggled
out of the hospital shows burns over his upper body after an attack
by Mugabe's Zanu PF militia last week. Another man, Gondai Mtetwa,
is held in the same room. A picture shows his flesh left raw and
exposed by severe burns down his back and left arm. A lawyer, Capera
Sengweni, gained access to the room with Jukwa and Mtetwa on Friday.
"They are both in severe pain but Jukwa is very, very bad.
He has no medication and they are not letting him leave to get treatment.
They have locked them in the room with orders that no one is to
see them," he said.
Others have been brought
to the ward with axe wounds and broken limbs. The MDC says that
more than 20 badly injured opposition activists are being held prisoner
in similar conditions in four smaller hospitals in the area. Most
of the men held against their will are victims of state-orchestrated
violence that has continued against the opposition since the widely
derided election that returned Mugabe to power a fortnight ago.
The MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, told the Guardian that the treatment
of the men on Ward B3 is further evidence that the state-orchestrated
campaign of killings, torture and abductions has continued after
the election. "We have been saying that the regime has been
waging war on its own people and this is further proof," he
said. "This is why it is so urgent that the African Union and
UN move so urgently as every day that passes more innocent people
are losing their lives in this orgy of violence."
Last week, Zimbabwe's
mission to the United Nations helped stave off security council
sanctions against Mugabe's regime by warning that they would "most
probably start a civil war". But the MDC says a state-orchestrated
war is continuing against its activists and supporters to try to
beat the party into a political agreement that would see Mugabe
retain power. At least nine people have been murdered around Gokwe
- traditionally a stronghold of Mugabe's Zanu PF - since the election;
scores are missing. Only one of the prisoners on Ward B3 has been
able to leave. Bigboy Chakazamba, an MDC councillor who was dragged
from his home and beaten by Zanu PF militia, walked out of Gokwe
general on Thursday having persuaded the nurses that he was immediately
returning to his rural home. "They were using logs and steel
bars and stones to break my bones. They left me unconscious,"
he said.
Chakazamba, 41, was held
on Ward B3 with a fractured right arm, broken bones in his left
hand and a broken nose. His arms were plastered shortly before he
left but he received no other treatment. "At home they thought
I was dead. My brother bought a coffin and came to the hospital
to collect my corpse. When he got there he found I was alive, but
the nurses said he couldn't have access without permission from
Major Mpofu," he said. The MDC believes the men are being held
to prevent them from exposing their injuries to the outside world,
particularly those with burns. A new opposition MP, Costin Muguti,
unseated a well-known Zanu PF official, Leonard Chikomba, who is
a relative of Mugabe. After he lost the vote, Chikomba is reported
to have said that Muguti would never sit in parliament. Muguti was
arrested by the police and held for nearly three weeks. He says
he was severely beaten. It was led by a man he believes to be an
intelligence officer named Kuda.
"He said there is
no more MDC in this constituency. MDC is finished here. They beat
me with knobkerries [clubs] and sticks. They just wanted to cause
damage to my head. I couldn't eat or talk for three days,"
said the MP. Muguti was dumped in a police cell and denied medical
treatment for more than a week. He was finally released on Thursday.
"The police told me this is just politics. We are also under
pressure to carry out certain orders," he said. "I am
the only MDC MP from Gokwe. They have made threats against me. They
have a belief that Gokwe is a Zanu PF stronghold and I think they
might even kill me to create a by-election." Several attempts
have been made to get treatment to the men on Ward B3 or move them
to hospitals in Harare, but the military and CIO have blocked them.
The opposition persuaded
a group of doctors from a foreign aid agency to visit the hospital
to help the prisoners, but when they arrived they were directed
to another ward and misled into believing they were seeing the abducted
men. Two ambulances dispatched to move the men to private hospitals
in Harare were blocked, their drivers interrogated for 18 hours
and then turned away. Most of Zimbabwe's state hospitals are desperately
short of medicines because of a lack of foreign currency to import
them. But Sengweni said that by refusing to allow the men to be
moved to private hospitals which do have drugs, or aid organisations
to deliver medicines to the men, the military is deliberately keeping
them in pain. "To detain anyone in a government hospital right
now is to deny them access to medication," he said.
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