|
Back to Index
Christian leaders detained in Zimbabwe for "unauthorized"
prayer meeting
BosNewLife
August 24, 2007
http://www.bosnewslife.com/news/3124-christian-leaders-detained-in-zimbabwe-for
HARARE, ZIMBABWE (BosNewsLife)--
The fate of at least 15 Christian leaders in Zimbabwe remained uncertain
Friday, August 24, after they were detained for attending a prayer
meeting near the capital Harare without permission from police,
opposition sources confirmed.
They were part of a group
that attended a prayer gathering at the Nyamutamba Hotel in Chitungwiza
town, south of Harare, on Saturday, August 18, representatives of
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) said in a statement
monitored by BosNewsLife.
The detentions came after
several pastors were initially briefly held and fined Saturday,
August 18, before being arrested again late Monday, August 20, MDC
sources added. MDC members of parliament Job Sikhala and Goodwich
Chimbaira reportedly also attended the prayer meeting, but were
apparently not arrested.
Lawyer James Tabora told
reporters that those detained Saturday were temporary released after
paying 40,000 Zimbabwe Dollars ($164) in fines.
Among those detained
are Bishop Samuel Pasula, and Pastors Mabhena, Patrick Thole, Gordon
Chinogurei and a preacher who was only identified as Pastor White,
BosNewsLife learned.
Government
"paranoid"
Police officials were
not immediately available for comment. MDC said "the suggestion
that pastors have to ask permission for a prayer meeting shows that
the government has become so paranoid that even an opposition member
of parliament attending a prayer gathering provides her delirium."
The situation also underscored
growing pressure on churches in Zimbabwe to participate in the political
process of the troubled African nation, said Christian rights group
Open Doors. "There are several reports about church leaders
and church members facing difficulties," the group said in
a statement to BosNewsLife.
The latest round of arrests
came on the heels of a report by a grouping of Zimbabwean human
rights organizations, who declared 2007 the country's worst year
for rights violations since 2000, when that year's general election
resulted in a surge of political-related violence.
The report by
the Human
Rights NGO Forum, entitled "At
Best a Falsehood, At Worst A Lie," takes to task two reports
issued by the Zimbabwe Republic Police accusing the political opposition
and civil society groups of perpetrating violence.
Police
Commissioner
Forum Chairman Noel Kututwa
told the Voice Of America (VOA) network in Zimbabwe that a copy
of the report went to the Commissioner of Police Augustine Chihuri
and Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi, but he neither attended
or sent a representative to the launch of the report.
ZRP spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena
declined to comment on the report. Besides Christian leaders, dissidents
are also persecuted, opposition groups say. This week some 15 plainclothes
policemen in five vehicles raided the Harare home of Women's Coalition
Chairwoman Betty Makoni taking her and two American women filmmakers
making a documentary on her activism into custody.
Sources close to the
situation reportedly said police seized the film equipment and detained
the three women all day Tuesday, August 21, before releasing them
at the end of the day with instructions to return the following
morning.
Rights watchers and Western
observers say a crackdown on civilians also show desperation of
President Robert Mugabe, the pro-independence campaigner who wrested
control from a small white community and became the country's first
black leader.
Commentators
say he now leads a nation whose economy is in tatters, where poverty
and unemployment are endemic and political strife and repression
commonplace.
(With BosNewsife
Senior Special Correspondent Eric Leijenaar and BosNewsLife Research
and reporting from Zimbabwe).
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|