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State violence targets women says report
IRIN News
October 12, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=74763
In a preliminary report
detailing widespread state violence, including the torture and the
unlawful detention of its members, a Zimbabwean social movement
is warning southern Africa's political leaders to temper their optimism
about the country's prospect of free and fair elections next year.
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), whose 55,000 membership is comprised
of women aged between 16 and 73, mainly in low-income employment,
released its interim report after the 14-member Southern African
Development Community (SADC) expressed confidence in Zimbabwe's
progress towards free and fair elections at its summit in August.
"WOZA members
do not have the protection of the law and peaceful protest is met
with brutal force," said the preliminary
Report on Political Violence Against Members of Women of Zimbabwe
Arise, compiled from a random sample of 15 percent (397 women)
of the 2,200 interviews conducted with its members.
The interim report found
that "WOZA members have suffered extreme abuse perpetrated
by state actors", with 75 percent subjected to humiliating
and degrading treatment, 50 percent suffering assaults and psychological
torture, and 40 percent subjected to physical torture.
Half of those surveyed
were detained longer than the statutory limit of 48 hours, while
about a quarter of the sample group had sustained injuries requiring
medical treatment.
According to the WOZA
interim report, "A prerequisite to any such election [to be
deemed free and fair] is the absence of violence, the presence of
peace and the respect for the civil rights of all."
WOZA was established
in 2003 to give women a voice in the worst economic crisis since
Zimbabwe won its independence from Britain in 1980, to advocate
female community leadership and encourage women to stand up for
their rights and political freedoms. The organisation's national
coordinator, Jenni Williams, has been arrested about 30 times and
has been living in safe houses for the past three years in an attempt
to avoid arrest.
Basic commodities, fuel,
electricity and drinking water are in all short supply in Zimbabwe;
it is estimated that as many as three million Zimbabweans, mostly
men, have left the country since 2000. Inflation is officially assessed
at more than 6,000 percent and four out of five people are unemployed.
International donor agencies say more than a third of the country's
12 million population will require emergency food aid in the coming
months.
Injuries,
torture and medical treatment
"The women endured
various forms of torture, including beatings with a variety of instruments,
e.g. baton sticks, booted feet, wooden planks, being slapped, and
falanga [beatings on the bottom of the feet]. Some violations occurred
in the street during arrest, whilst others took place in police
vehicles and/or in police custody," the report said.
"An angry and increasingly
desperate population is consistently prevented from voicing their
complaints. All Zimbabweans are victims of economic and social collapse,
but those that dare to protest are targeted for police brutality,"
the report alleged.
WOZA activists are routinely
addressed as "whores" by the police; mothers, who often
take their babies to protests because they cannot afford to pay
caregivers, has resulted in babies being detained by the police
along with their mothers.
"Some of the women
are subjected to cruel and inhuman and degrading treatment together
with their children, as the police do not separate the mothers and
their children when they suffer this treatment," the report
said.
The abuse of the women
appears to be sanctioned by high-ranking police officers. "It
is WOZA's experience that on most occasions the [police] riot squad
assault members on instruction from their superiors, and it is often
not random violence perpetrated by individual officers," the
report alleged.
According to the survey,
seven percent of women reported that police had been transferred
from their duty stations "as punishment for failing to mistreat
the women", although WOZA cautioned that this was an "assumption"
made by the interviewees and had not been independently verified.
Women had suffered various
injuries from beatings meted out by the security services, from
broken bones to deep-tissue bruising. "Of the women that were
assaulted and subjected to torture, 105 (26 percent) of the sample
group reported that they had sought medical treatment. Twenty of
these were admitted to hospital for the beatings they received from
state agents," the report said.
IRIN was unable to obtain
comment from the Zimbabwe government about the allegations of its
human rights abuses.
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