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Members
arrested, beaten and 11 dumped in a cemetery out of town
Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
November 13, 2012
Water
shortage protests continued in Bulawayo with 57 members arrested
and beaten. The first edition of the protest began at 11am targeting
the Council administration Tower block. A squad of 4 Riot Police
disrupted the peaceful protest and surrounded 35 members. After
15 minutes senior police officers, one identified as the Controller,
arrived and engaged the group announcing that he was 'driving them
off'. He was semi professional and no one was beaten or taken them
into custody.
As midday struck
5 additional protests began separately all intending to converge
on the Government complex.
The first protest
reached the Mhlahlandlela complex but a green truck carrying the
reaction squad with 12 Riot Police. They quickly arrested 11 members,
9 women and 2 men and took them across the road to the Drill Hall,
placing them under guard at 12:15.
The same vehicle
then drove to the intersection H. Chitepo Street and 10th Avenue.
The police officers disembarked to beat members were marching towards
the complex. They indiscriminately beat even passes by. As they
beat people these officers loudly shouted insults and violently
beat anyone in their path. They shouted tribal and gender obscenities
referring to the Ndebele people and calling the women prostitutes.
The second 11
were then arrested by the same squad, one referred to as Mukoshi
who said he did not care if the activists knew his name. He also
said with great support and approving laughter from his colleague,
'this country was liberated by blood and only those who spilt blood
can be the ones to talk.' He went on to ask them to answer his question
in the Shona language - Do they have their own dams, why are they
asking for water.
The 11 were
then forced to sit in the truck and driven to Bulawayo Central.
When they got there and as they were disembarking, Lizwe Jamela
of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights chief law officer was present.
The officer commanding Bulawayo Chief Inspector Rangwani arrived
and shouted at the officers asking them what they had brought these
women to the police station. He said take them back to where you
got them. The driver of the police truck in the hearing of Lizwe
Jamela said he would not take them back to Drill Hall but would
drive them into the bush and dump them. He promptly drove away toward
Victoria Falls with the lawyer in pursuit dumping them at a cemetery
out of town. Four members are being seen by the doctor and many
others are being attended by the WOZA medical support triage.
The first 11
members arrested have also since been released so no members are
left in custody at this time.
WOZA have argued
that there is a tribal element of the manner in which police in
Bulawayo treat WOZA members and this has today been further confirmed
by the insults of all the Riot Officers. The women were called prostitutes
and told not to speak to each other in the Ndebele language as the
Ndebele people were all killed off by Gukurahundi
in the 1980s. See the list of demands here
Visit
the WOZA fact
sheet
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