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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Lewis
reaches out to women raped for supporting Zimbabwe's opposition
Stephanie
Nolen, Globe and Mail
November 10, 2008
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081110.wzimbabwe10/BNStory/International/home
Former United
Nations ambassador Stephen Lewis is spearheading an effort to bring
to justice perpetrators of politically motivated sexual violence
in Zimbabwe, a powerful addition to existing attempts to hold Robert
Mugabe's regime accountable for gross human-rights violations.
AIDS-Free World, an advocacy
group founded last year by Mr. Lewis, is quietly collecting the
testimony of women who survived gang rapes by leaders in Mr. Mugabe's
ZANU-PF party, after the Zimbabwean President lost the first round
of presidential elections in March.
Over the past week, international
human-rights lawyers enlisted by Mr. Lewis collected sworn affidavits
from eight women, all of them supporters or organizers for the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change who were raped and brutally beaten
after elections this past spring.
Each of the women described
how her attackers, who openly identified themselves with Mr. Mugabe's
ZANU-PF party, made clear that she was to be the victim of a systematic
policy of punishment because she dared to challenge Mr. Mugabe's
rule.
The stories the women
tell are harrowing. "When they were finished with me, I could
no longer stand," said Carol, 39, an MDC supporter from the
southwest of Zimbabwe. (The identities of the women have been confirmed
by The Globe and Mail but pseudonyms have been used here for their
protection.) The ZANU militia men who had detained her made her
crawl on her belly to the bored bureaucrat holding a list and sitting
nearby, and tick off her name to acknowledge that she had had her
punishment. "Mine was the fourth name on the list for that
day." Her name crossed off, they moved on.
This is not the first
effort to collect evidence of crimes against humanity committed
by the Mugabe regime: Several Zimbabwean human-rights organizations
are also working to gather and preserve evidence of state-sponsored
human-rights abuses, which have typified the recent years of Mr.
Mugabe's rule but exploded after the Zimbabwean leader lost the
first round of the presidential election to the MDC's Morgan Tsvangirai,
the first open challenge to his authority in 28 years.
But Mr. Lewis's organization
has some advantages. The AIDS-Free World team, which is U.S.-based,
can operate much more freely than Zimbabwean lawyers and activists.
Plus they have, through Mr. Lewis's long years as a politician and
diplomat, access to resources and to influential people. The lawyers
involved are experts in the field, some of whom have prosecuted
war crimes and are donating their time.
"We're in a position
to collect durable sworn affidavits that would hold up in any proceeding,
so that if we end up somewhere like the International Criminal Court,
a defence lawyer will not be able to throw it out," Mr. Lewis
said in a telephone interview from Canada.
"The affidavits
bear out that these attacks were directed at the political opposition
in a very methodical way - the women chosen were chosen because
they were part of the political opposition and the links made to
ZANU-PF are unassailable."
Long concerned about
the implosion of Zimbabwe, Mr. Lewis, the former UN special envoy
for AIDS in Africa, was horrified to learn last summer from Betty
Makoni, a firebrand Zimbabwean human-rights activist with whom he
has worked on AIDS issues, about the systematic campaign of gang
rape that accompanied the first election and the runoff vote in
late June. Mr. Lewis and his co-director and long-time colleague
Paula Donovan were soon making calls to try to figure out what they
could do - to help victims, but equally important, to try to end
the gross impunity with which Mr. Mugabe and ZANU-PF have operated.
Mr. Mugabe and
Mr. Tsvangirai signed a power-sharing deal
in September but Mr. Mugabe has refused to relinquish any control
of the state. A third of Zimbabweans now face famine, and inflation
has spiralled into the billions per cent. The two leaders left another
round of power-sharing talks in Johannesburg this weekend without
a workable agreement.
AIDS-Free World works
with women's groups in Zimbabwe to identify rape survivors who would
take the risky step of giving testimony, and in some cases has helped
get them across borders to do so. The group finds doctors to provide
them medical care - many of the women still have unhealed wounds
five months later, since Zimbabwe's medical system has entirely
ceased to function, and all need HIV tests - and also brings the
lawyers who record the testimonies.
A first group of nine
women produced affidavits in September with the help of pro bono
lawyers from the Toronto firm Blakes; eight more gave their testimony
this week. Shonali Shome, an AIDS-Free World lawyer collecting the
evidence, said it is "chilling."
"We're hearing the
same thing over and over, we're seeing the same patterns in different
parts of Zimbabwe: the women tell us about the same words coming
out of the perpetrators mouths," she said. "The language
that's used, the pattern of how they were abducted, it speaks to
a hierarchical level of command." It shows the rapes were both
systematic and widespread (Ms. Makoni said she knows of 700 cases),
the two criteria for crimes against humanity, Ms. Shome said.
Carol, for example, said
she was told repeatedly by the ZANU-PF leader who raped her: "You
deserve this, this is your punishment for daring to support the
MDC. We have a list and everyone on it like you will get a punishment."
The AIDS-Free World team
is also researching the best route for a prosecution: Zimbabwe has
crimes-against-humanity legislation, but its judicial system has
been entirely hijacked by the Mugabe regime. The next choice, Ms.
Shome said, is prosecution in a neighbouring state, all of which
are signatories to the Rome Statute that says crimes against humanity
can be prosecuted in another nation when a state cannot or will
not take action domestically.
Mr. Lewis and his colleagues
are also considering bodies such as the African Court (the judicial
wing of the African Union) or the AU's human-rights commission (although
this would not be a criminal prosecution). A final option is the
International Criminal Court, although this is unlikely for political
reasons.
The women who gathered
to give testimony this past week are adamant that they want their
individual attackers prosecuted - most can name at least some of
those who raped and beat them - but also wish to see senior people
in the ZANU-PF leadership, starting with Mr. Mugabe, held accountable.
The challenge in such a prosecution, Ms. Donovan acknowledged, is
how to prove that the rapes and beatings were not criminal acts,
carried out by individuals or rogue ZANU-PF members, but rather
part of an orchestrated campaign for which responsibility originated
with Mr. Mugabe and a handful of his close advisers.
Yet this may not be impossible
to prove: many organizations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty
International have documented the state-sponsored nature of the
electoral violence. Mr. Mugabe, in campaign speeches, spoke bluntly
about what punishment would await those who challenged his right
to rule. And most of the women who have given affidavits repeatedly
reported their attacks to the police, as have hundreds of others,
but not a single election-related rape has been investigated or
prosecuted, which suggests state sanction.
Ms. Donovan said the
affidavits will serve a function besides prosecution. AIDS-Free
World will use them to remind the world "that Zimbabwe is on
the verge of being a failed state and the world is not intervening."
"We are exposing
the fact that this is a terrorist state and the government is a
terrorist regime and the entire country is either living in a culture
of complete impunity or a culture of complete terror. We are not
just going to take these affidavits and lock them up somewhere."
The collection of the
evidence has also had a second, unintended consequence: The women
have found a great cathartic comfort in being together, Ms. Makoni
said. The first group began the week so traumatized that they were
terrified to leave the room to go to the toilet themselves; none
could speak more than a few words of her story without breaking
down; most had not slept for more than two hours at a time since
the rape. Five days later, she said, the women were talking freely,
articulating great anger at their attackers, and had banded together
to form the Zimbabwe Rape Survivors' Network.
"I knew this was
coming," said Rose, 51, whose was gang-raped and then had to
watch her young daughter suffer the same assault. "I knew joining
the MDC and working for the opposition could be my death sentence."
Rose furiously
blinked back tears when she spoke - but like the other women, she
is also angry, ferociously, inspiringly angry. They demanded, as
a group, to know why the world stands by and lets Mr. Mugabe continue
his rule unchecked. "People have been tortured and maimed,"
said Shirley, who was stripped in public and raped by eight ZANU-PF
militia members. "You are beaten but the hospital can't help,
they have nothing. So what does the United Nations want to see?
What do they need to see before they intervene in the Zimbabwe situation?"
Victims
tell their stories
Lovemore,
age 51
I began to work with
MDC in 2002 because I was worried that there was no rule of law
and no freedom of expression. Shortly before the runoff vote, supporters
of ZANU-PF came to my house and they told me, "Don't think
that you are not being seen, that you are invisible - any time you
can be taken."
They asked for the names
of my children and said that since on March 29 I voted for Tsvangirai,
they would take our vote on June 27 - that we would have to claim
to be illiterate so that someone from ZANU-PF would vote for us.
A few days later, they came back and broke into the house at 9 p.m.
when we were sleeping - they were looking for my husband, who is
on the MDC ward committee, but he was not there so instead they
took me and my son, who is 22.
I was naked and they
did not give me time to dress. They drove us to a farm, and they
put us in a room and began to beat us with wet sticks one-metre
long. Then eventually they told us to sleep - and five of them lay
down in the room with us. I could not sleep, but spent the night
just lying there. The next day, they put me to work sweeping on
the farm - I had no clothes, and they said I should go naked because
we were like snakes that move around naked. I found a grain sack
to tie around myself.
That evening, we were
beaten again on top of the wounds we already had. The next day was
the same. I tried to talk to them. I asked them why they were beating
me. They told me it was because we voted for the MDC and we sold
the country to the white people. The third day, they made us walk
30 kilometres to another farm - I was naked, in front of my son.
There we were beaten again and then we were separated and I was
put with another woman in a small tobacco shed. That's where some
men came and raped us.
It was dark in the shed
so I don't really know how many men forced themselves on me - but
I felt I was raped three times. They said, "We want to fuck
you hard, to do it hard, because your husbands have spoiled you
by allowing you to go and support the MDC." Eventually they
left and some other ZANU people came in the morning with the same
truck and drove us home.
My husband was
happy to see me alive - but this thing has destroyed my marriage,
because now when we try to be intimate he is afraid that he might
contract the deadly disease. Sometimes we are intimate but I can
tell that he is just forcing himself so that I am not hurt. My wounds
have not healed, I am still in pain - I will show you the wounds
if you want. I know these people - that they are ZANU-PF supporters:
I have their names ... On election day, we went to the polling station
but they forced us to do what they had said, to say we could not
write, and so they got someone to vote for us and they voted for
ZANU-PF in my name. That was like being raped again.
Rose,
age 51
I am the district chairperson
for the MDC. A month before the runoff, I was sitting with my family
in our sitting room drinking tea and watching DVDs. I went to the
bedroom to lay my two-year-old granddaughter on the bed when I heard
vehicles. I lifted the curtain and to my horror and surprise I saw
men armed with guns coming toward the house - they broke the lock
and forced their way into the house.
They were wearing ZANU-PF
T-shirts, they were members of the youth militia. My husband fled
out the back door. I grabbed my granddaughter and tried to run,
too, but I was force-marched back into the house.
Fifteen armed men searched
the house and stole some things like the DVD player and my husband's
cellphone - then they asked whose house it was and I told them my
maiden name. They said, "You are lying," and they struck
me with a pistol on the back of my head. Then they asked me for
an ID card. I was shaking and could not look for it and they hit
me in the face and knocked out several of my teeth. They forced
me out of the house and I started screaming. I tried to take my
granddaughter, saying I could not leave her with just the other
children in the house but they grabbed her from me - they made her
lie on the floor with my daughter and they threw a blanket over
them to muffle the sound of their screaming.
They forced me into the
truck - they surrounded me like you do with a dead body [at a ritual
washing] and guns were pointed at me so I could not even raise my
head - I don't know how many but all over my head. They drove me
about 40 kilometres into the bush. When they pulled me out of the
car, I saw several other militia members. They pulled me into the
bush and stripped off all my clothes. They pushed me to my belly
and they took each of my arms and legs and held me to the ground.
Then they used my husband's cellphone to light my vagina.
The first one to rape
me was the chair of the local ZANU branch - he lives in my neighbourhood.
Then three others raped me. After raping me they told me to lie
on my stomach again and they beat me. They asked me what position
I hold with the MDC and what position my husband holds. I just told
them I am a strong MDC supporter and I did not hold any post. They
said, "We know you are in the MDC hit squad." I laughed
when they said that and they beat me harder. When I was beaten so
hard that it had become unbearably painful, I suddenly reached up
and grabbed the next stick that was going to hit me and said that,
"Whoever gave you my name has crucified me. You have guns,
why don't you just shoot me rather than inflict such pain on me?"
They beat me again and again until I could no longer move - I heard
them say, "She won't wake up again, she's dead."
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