|
Back to Index
The
cycle of violence continues
Moyiga Nduru, IPS News
July 10, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=38493
Pius Ncube, the outspoken
Catholic archbishop of Bulawayo in southern Zimbabwe, has urged
President Robert Mugabe to step down -- this as the country faces
deepening political and economic woes.
"Mugabe is a man
who is a megalomaniac. He loves power, he lives for power. Even
his own party is appealing to him to step down. Zimbabweans are
desperate to offer him anything (for him) to relinquish power,"
he told journalists in South Africa's commercial hub, Johannesburg,
Tuesday.
Ncube was launching
a report titled 'Destructive
Engagement: Violence, Mediation and Politics in Zimbabwe', published
by the Solidarity Peace Trust. He chairs this church-based non-governmental
organisation (NGO), which aims -- in part -- to further justice
and peace in Zimbabwe.
In the 44-page document,
the trust accuses the Mugabe regime of continuing to use violence
against its political opponents in order to cling to power.
"Out of 414 individuals
interviewed, 30 percent or 122 reported torture between March, April
and May 2007. This is a shockingly high figure, yet it represents
the tip of the iceberg in Zimbabwe. Apart from politically motivated
torture, torture of those arrested on suspicion of having committed
a criminal offence is routine in Zimbabwe," notes the report.
"In 90
percent of the attacks.government agencies such as the police, Central
Intelligence Organisation (CIO), Criminal Investigation Department
(CID) and army" were involved, it adds. More than three-quarters
of reported cases were in the capital, Harare -- "one of the
two major urban areas considered to be opposition territory".
Recent years have seen
Zimbabwe plunged into a crisis caused by a variety of factors, including
increased repression and politically-motivated farm seizures. Mugabe
accuses the West of plotting to unseat him, and of opposing land
reform in Zimbabwe because it has caused minority white farmers
to be dispossessed.
Tuesday's launch
came as the president, in power since 1980, had ordered price cuts,
this amidst runaway inflation and widespread shortages of essential
goods.
"Inflation
is now 5,000 percent. But economists say it's (actually) 10,000
percent," Arnold Tsunga, executive director of Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights, an NGO based in Harare, said in an
interview with IPS.
More than 1,300 supermarket
managers and owners have been arrested for refusing to sell their
merchandise at the lower prices.
"I think Mugabe
is trying to impress and woo voters for next year's elections. Unfortunately
his ploy isn't working," Ken Tandare, a youth activist with
Zimbabwe's main opposition group, the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), told IPS on the sidelines of the launch.
"All basic items
such as cooking oil, salt, sugar and mealie meal (maize meal, a
staple food) have disappeared from the supermarket shelves and resurfaced
in the thriving parallel market. The goods are now being sold for
more than triple their original prices in the parallel market. This
has made people very angry."
Noted Brian Raftopolous,
a Zimbabwean academic and veteran political analyst who is now based
in South Africa: "The price cuts are not going to deal with
shortages. Shortages will continue. There's no way out for the economy.
It's going to affect the region, especially South Africa."
The foundering economy
has forced Zimbabweans to take desperate measures.
"Watchmen
now live at the premises where they work. They can't afford the
50,000 Zimbabwe dollars (about 35 U.S. cents) for a one-way fare
on public transport. A watchman gets 1.5 million Zimbabwe dollars
(about 11 U.S. dollars) a month," said Jonah Gokova of the
Christian Alliance of Zimbabwe, in response to a question from IPS
about how low-paid workers in the country were making ends meet.
"They also need
money for sugar, cooking oil, salt and bread. The price of a loaf
of bread, which used to cost 40,000 Zimbabwe dollars (about 28 U.S.
cents), has now been slashed to 22,000 Zimbabwe dollars (about 16
U.S. dollars) under the ongoing price cuts."
Professionals are also
feeling the pinch.
"For example,
junior lawyers get about 70 U.S. dollars a month. This means they
can't afford a car and they have to use public means. A seven-seater
commuter bus crams around 15 people. A lawyer has to cram himself
or herself in there. Since work starts at eight AM, he or she has
to wake up at around 5 AM and wait for an hour to catch public transport,"
recounted Tsunga.
"Usually there's
a queue of 30 to 50 people waiting for public transport."
Concerned over events
in Zimbabwe, the 14-nation Southern African Development Community,
of which Zimbabwe is a member, asked South African President Thabo
Mbeki to mediate in the crisis earlier this year -- this after Zimbabwe
experienced another spike in violence. Millions have fled the state,
mainly to neighbouring South Africa.
Various media sources
report that the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front (ZANU-PF) and the two factions of the MDC are already meeting
in the South African capital, Pretoria, to engineer a way out of
the current impasse.
However, the confinement
of reported talks to ZANU-PF and the MDC has enraged Zimbabwe's
civil society.
"We hear that they
are meeting in Pretoria. But we don't know how much the MDC will
be prepared to compromise. The MDC has quietly and quickly gone
to the negotiations without consulting its structures," Nicholas
Mkaronda, co-ordinator of the South African branch of the Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition, an NGO, told IPS.
Asked whether he was
optimistic about the SADC initiative, Mkaronda replied, "One
must have hope."
But hope may be beyond
the reach of many in Zimbabwe.
"The political and
economic situation in Zimbabwe has now reached life-threatening
proportions," observed Ncube.
"The rapid decline
of the economy and the commandist response of the state indicate
a government that has neither a strong sense of responsibility towards
its citizens, not any substantive plan to move Zimbabwe out of its
deepening crisis."
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
|