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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on WOZA Valentine's Day arrests 2006
WOZA
statement on Valentine's Day
protests
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
February 17, 2006
On 13th and 14th February
2006, women, old and young, and a few brave men left their homes to go
into the streets calling for Bread and Roses. They were prepared to be
arrested and to spend nights in police custody in order to deliver this
message to the country's leaders. In Bulawayo, 174 women, 7 men and 14
babies were arrested and in Harare, an estimated 242 women and 5 babies
were arrested, many of whom spent more than three days in custody.
What made these people
leave their families? Is handing out roses and asking for food now a criminal
offense deserving arrest? Is a peaceful procession of singing women a
threat to the powers that be? The answer is YES! The so-called 'Liberation
Government' has a problem. It cannot feed its people and give them the
respect and dignity they deserve, represented by their call for Roses
too! When there are thousands of empty kitchens what can a mother feed
her children? Life for Zimbabweans now echoes the song sung by the 1912
strikers in America: "Our lives shall not be sweated from birth until
life closes; hearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread, but give
us roses."
The Bread and Roses
theme was selected as a fitting beginning for WOZA's Social Justice campaign.
As we go out onto the streets in the coming months, our demands for a
socially just Zimbabwe will continue and become even clearer. As we continue
to protest, we will also be consulting across Zimbabwe asking people to
share their views and opinions on what is needed for dignified living.
We will be coming to a place near YOU and asking you to DREAM with us!
We will also be asking you to join us in marching to turn those dreams
into POSSIBILITIES. We believe the solution is in our own hands and even
'babies' are doing their share of the work.
As International Women's
Day comes and goes, the women still recovering from their stay in the
cells find nothing to celebrate. But they have high morale as they know
that they are doing something towards bringing about social justice. They
look upon their suffering in police cells as work they do in their fields;
hoping to one day reap a better living. They no longer call it a prison
cell or a jail but they call it their 'garden'; some even say it is a
'park' where you go to relax and daydream of a better tomorrow.
But this is what really
happened to us in the police cells. In Bulawayo the cells were too small
to accommodate the number that was arrested so we were kept in a wire
cage in the courtyard of the police station. As it was raining heavily,
we were all soaked to the skin. To keep warm, we sang at the top of our
voices for the more than eight hours we were outside. We sang revolutionary
songs and danced. Some of the police officers joined in and even made
requests for us to sing certain songs. Later that night, the police bar
inside the station was cleared and all of us squeezed in with three police
guards. Some of us managed to sleep along the bar counter and under the
pool table, but still many had to sleep seated. The next day, three leaders
were sent in advance to court but the prosecutor advised the state to
proceed by way of summons and release all of us. It took us from noon
to six pm to get everyone out of custody due to further harassment. Those
who had not gone to court were made to stand in the blazing sun for hours
before they were allowed to sit down.
In Harare some women
were arrested while on their way to the protest and some as they completed
the peaceful protest outside parliament. For three days, their lives were
turned into a living hell. Over 100, many elderly grandmothers, were forced
to remove all of their underwear and threatened with rape. They were denied
food and water; assaulted by booted officers; made to sleep on sewerage
and human waste; kept in the blazing sun without water; subjected to psychological
torture by being threatened with prolonged detention and being told they
had to pay a fine in order to be released, in denial of their right to
be formally charged and taken to court. Many of the women who are HIV
positive were denied food and their anti-retroviral (ARV) medication.
Eventually the most resistant 63 women were taken to court on the Friday
after a court order was issued - they are currently on free bail.
But will this treatment
stop us from continuing? The answer is a loud NO! We will continue to
visit the park to daydream until we have a Zimbabwe where there is a decent
standard of living and past injustices can be remembered without a sharp
stab of pain in the heart because they would have been dealt with.
Why is WOZA consulting
about social justice? What are our objectives?
· to insist that our leaders understand the issues that concern
ordinary people
· allow the voices of grassroots people to be consulted and heard
and decide their own future
· talk about the basic and fundamental rights that belong to us
all and build an equal society
· come up with community-driven agenda of social justice around
which we can all mobilise for action. We must help each other to dream
and to turn those dreams into possibilities
· create and raise expectations of people as to what political
leaders should deliver and how to hold them accountable in a non-violent
manner
An overview of initial
consultations on social justice
Social justice can be defined as a way where people have equal opportunities/access
to social, economic, cultural, religious and political needs regardless
of race, gender, creed or any other form of discrimination and where past
injustices have been dealt with.
It includes the following:
- Full enjoyment
of all social, political, economic and cultural rights
- An equal society,
including gender and ethnic equality
- Respect for human
rights, including women's and children's rights
- Freedoms, including
speech, assembly and association
- Respect and tolerance
of diversity - culture and religion
- Transparency and
accountability
- Equal participation
in political and economic decision-making
- Equal application
of the law - access to justice and understanding of the law
- Correction of past
injustices such as Gukurahundi and Murambatsvina
- Gutsaruzhinji/inhlalakahle
yabantu (Good living)
- Access to affordable
education
- Access to adequate
and affordable food
- Access to affordable
housing, electricity, sanitation and clean water
- Access to affordable
healthcare and medication including anti-retrovirals (ARVs)
- Equal and fair
access to fertile land, inputs, equipment and secure ownership
- Equal opportunities
to resources, employment, self-help projects and the right to earn a
living wage
- Development of
adequate infrastructure and access to affordable transport
- Environmentally
sustainable usage of resources
The consultation process
continues - we would like your opinion on how we can make Zimbabwe a socially
just nation. Email us at wozazimbabwe@yahoo.com
or write to us. Join us in the street to see how your dreams can become
possibilities
Visit
the WOZA fact
sheet
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