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In
support of the Southern African Zimbabwe Solidarity Movement
The Save
Zimbabwe Now Campaign
April 07, 2009
The Save Zimbabwe Now
Campaign joins the rest of the world in condemning the recent expose
of the horrifying conditions in Zimbabwe's prisons and the appalling
way in which people have been left to rot by the Zimbabwean Prisons
Service. To allow the citizens of your country to wither away and
perish under such circumstances amounts to nothing less than a slow
form of the vilest form of torture, degrading, cruel and inhuman
punishment.
While the recent Special
Assignment images have brought fresh attention to what is going
on these conditions have been known by the Zimbabwean opposition
and the activists who organise in solidarity for many years. They
are the thin end of the wedge of the degrading and inhuman way in
which the Zimbabwean state and ZANU PF have used torture and violence
to retain their grip on power.
The famous epitaph
that says to know a country one must look at its prisons is the
aptest way of describing how far Zimbabwe has fallen. The complete
and utter disregard for human dignity highlighted by the terrifying
images we have seen exists not only in prisons but wherever ZANU
PF operations like "Murambatsvina"
(Clean Out the Filth) and "Mavhotera
Papi" (Punish the Opposition) have destroyed all of those
who have stood in their way.
This is the human flotsam
and jetsam of the vicious politics of power that are being ignored
by the elite deals that have been struck. These are the people who
are most vulnerable and for whom the long road of reconstruction
holds little relief, today, tomorrow or as far ahead along the road
as they can see.
The conditions for prisoners
are symptomatic of the way the human dignity of the majority of
Zimbabweans has been stripped in the most barbaric ways. The Save
Zimbabwe Now Campaign was launched at least partly in response to
the appalling ways that the bodies of the dead were left to pile
up stories high in morgues across the country. Eye witnesses spoke
of cadavers thrown two or three stories down to burst and shatter
because the lifts in the hospitals in which they died were no longer
working. Relatives were being called to remove corpses that had
been gnawed on by rats before they rotted to pulp. If this is how
Zimbabwe was treating its dead, the indignity of those still living
could scarcely be imagined.
That things
were allowed to deteriorate to this point will hang forever as a
mantle of shame over SADC and the South African government. While
the Global Political
Agreement may provide a shaky transitional map towards a people
driven constitution and a legitimate election it has come at great
cost to ordinary people. People whose will have been ignored and
whose needs remain unmet.
The Solidarity Movement
in South Africa and the SADC region will continue to apply diverse
forms of pressure and find innovative ways of responding effectively
to the needs of those who have been cast aside. The direction will
come from Zimbabweans themselves but the call to action and the
moral imperative to speak out remains a responsibility that lies
with all of us.
Aluta continua An injustice
anywhere is an injustice everywhere.
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