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Rights
groups track assaults on Zimbabwe opposition
Michael
Wines, International Herald Tribune
April 13, 2007
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/04/13/africa/zimbabwe.php
JOHANNESBURG:
Human rights groups in Zimbabwe have begun to document with numbers
and names an extraordinary government campaign of abductions and
beatings aimed at critics of President Robert Mugabe.
Increasingly, some say,
the attacks appear directed largely at crippling the only opposition
party of note in Zimbabwe, the Movement for Democratic Change, before
a presidential election scheduled for next March.
The head of that party's
main faction, Morgan Tsvangirai, charged during a news conference
Thursday in Harare, the capital, that government agents had arrested
or beaten at least 600 party members since Feb. 18, and that 150
had suffered life-threatening injuries.
There is no way to verify
those claims. But separately, a spreadsheet provided in the past
week by a Zimbabwe human rights advocate documents attacks on 150
residents of low-income neighborhoods in Harare in the five weeks
from Feb. 18 to March 26. Ninety-nine were identified as members
of the Movement for Democratic Change, and some were high-ranking
officials.
Nearly 100 other beatings
since Feb. 18 in the Harare area were listed. Most of them occurred
as the police broke up opposition-party rallies.
The human-rights advocate,
who is not an opposition-party member, estimated that the documented
attacks could represent as little as one-fifth of all beatings,
because many victims were afraid to report them. "It's very
structured," said the advocate, who declined to be named for
fear of retaliation. "They know exactly what they're doing
and who they're going after. People are told not to seek medical
treatment. They don't come to us and tell what happened, because
they're simply terrified."
On Friday the
Zimbabwe Association
of Doctors for Human Rights issued its own statement on the
attacks, saying it had documented 48 hospitalizations and more than
175 lesser medical treatments for assaults in the past month alone.
The association is nonpartisan and does not attempt to identify
the political affiliations of the victims.
The chairman, of the
group Dr. Douglas Gwatidzo, said in an interview Friday that the
attacks seemed to have peaked in late March, but that they had continued
steadily, albeit at a lesser rate, since then.
"It's a
continuous level of attacks, without an increase or decrease,"
he said. "We see maybe three or four a day coming into hospital.
But that's not a reflection of what's happening on the ground."
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