|
Back to Index
WOZA
calls for peace in Zimbabwe in Harare on International Day of Peace
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
September 21, 2009
Over 1,000 members of
Women and Men of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA/MOZA) took to the streets
of Harare today to commemorate the United Nations International
Day of Peace. Riot police responded but no arrests have been reported
to date but WOZA leaders are still in the process of confirming
the safe return of all activists in their areas.
Six simultaneous protests
converged on the offices of the United Nations in Kwame Nkurumah
Street from different starting points. The peaceful group of men
and women sang as they marched 'Father, send the Holy Spirit to
bring peace to Zimbabwe' and 'we are united as WOZA, speaking with
one voice that we want peace'. At the UNDP offices, a petition asking
the UN to help intervene in Zimbabwe to restore the health and education
sectors was handed in to officials in the building. The petition
(included below) also called on the UN to pressure the inclusive
government to stop the harassment of vendors and ordinary Zimbabweans
by police.
Placards carried
by the demonstrators included: 'there is no peace in Zimbabwe',
'we want peace' and 'there is no education - is this what the GPA
means?' Bystanders called their encouragement to the demonstrators,
including a uniformed police officer that urged the group to walk
faster so that they could reach their target before the riot police
arrived.
The theme of the protest
was 'Social Justice will bring Peace of Mind' and its aim was to
carry a message to the inclusive government that Zimbabweans still
do not have peace of mind a year after the power-sharing deal was
signed. Life for ordinary Zimbabweans remains precarious and human
rights activists continue to be beaten and harassed for exercising
their constitutional right to peaceful protest. Since the power-sharing
deal was signed in September 2008, 40 WOZA activists have been arrested
on seven separate occasions after peaceful protests, WOZA leaders
Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu spent three weeks in Mlondolozi
Prison and hundreds of peaceful Zimbabweans citizens were brutally
beaten by police for merely speaking out about the hardships in
their lives.
Through today's march,
WOZA is calling on the government of Zimbabwe to implement all aspects
of the Global Political Agreement to ensure that Zimbabweans can
have peace of mind and to guarantee the right of ALL Zimbabweans
to live in peace. The scars of violence, recent and decades-old,
still affect Zimbabweans whilst the daily struggle for survival
continues with no respite. Social justice and a meaningful constitutional
process needs to be prioritized by the government instead of political
games.
The march also marked
the International Day of Peace which is commemorated annually on
21st September and which encourages individuals, organizations and
nations to create practical acts of peace.
Visit the WOZA fact
sheet
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
|