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Personal
testimony on interrogation by the police
Sinini
Mhlanga, WOZA Member
March 08, 2005
Sinini Mhlanga - (35yrs) Mother of two
It was approximately
1230pm; five of us were sitting in the shade outside St Patrick's Church.
Suddenly a police vehicle stopped beside us. They ordered us to open the
placards we were carrying, they read the message. One placard read - Our
pots are empty, please vote wisely. Another - Please abstain from Sex,
ukuzila amacansi. We were told to get in the Defender and were taken to
Ross Camp police station, whereupon we were thoroughly searched by male
police officers.
They interrogated
us demanding the names of the leadership, when we refused they told us
that we are being used by France (The Country?). They threatened to detain
us for three days. They demanded to know how much we were paid since France
is giving WOZA a lot of money. I think they made this up because they
like to say MDC support Blair so maybe they though France suits WOZA?
After about fifteen
minutes ten more WOZA women joined us, then the arresting officer phoned
his boss and excitedly told him that finally he had managed to arrest
WOZA, only to be disappointed when the boss said that he was only keen
to interrogate the leaders.
We were then separated
into two defenders and driven to our homes and they conducted an illegal
search. They said they were not interested in MDC material as they could
campaign but were interested in WOZA material. They of course found our
WOZA scarves, which they took. They took us back Ross Camp where they
read the fliers (Woza Moya March edition) we carrying. They demanded to
know the political party we are aligned to, or whether we are a political
party ourselves - we told them we are a women's organisation. They then
said there was nothing wrong with our fliers, we must reveal the source,
and we were not naïve to fall for that.
At one time when they
were interrogating us, they took us into the cells and kept Nolwandle,
the youngest, back for questioning. We were worried about this but when
they brought us back, they told us that we should discipline her are she
is very cheeky. Eventually we were released one by one, because they had
failed to charge us, even though one female officer was advocating that
we should be detained without a charge.
Visit
the WOZA fact
sheet
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