OneWorld.net note: A group of Zimbabwean female human rights defenders explains how they continue to promote electoral reform through flyer distribution and public demonstrations despite political repression and police abuse.
Poverty in Zimbabwe is increasing at an unprecedented rate. Eighteen-year-old Priviledge, pictured here, was forced to drop out of school to help provide for her malnourished siblings. © Mercy CorpsPower-sharing talks between Zimbabwean President Robert
Mugabe and leading opposition candidate Morgan Tsvangirai have come to
an impasse. In late June, Tsvangirai, head of the MDC party, withdrew
from Zimbabwe's run-off election citing political violence against his
supporters. Mugabe and his
ZANU-PF party have been widely criticized for politically motivated attacks against MDC officials and supporters in
the run-up to and aftermath of the June elections.
In addition to political wrangling, Zimbabwe is locked in a full-fledged economic and humanitarian crisis. It is estimated that 40 percent of Zimbabwe's population will require food aid by 2009. To read more about human rights, politics, and the economy in Zimbabwe, visit OneWorld UK's Zimbabwe country guide.
Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), the activist group featured here, consists of over 35,000 people working to empower Zimbabwean women to stand up for their rights and take a lead role in solving the current crisis in this East African country. WOZA has staged over 50 non-violent protests in the past three years and numerous activists have endured beatings and imprisonment because of their efforts.
From: Women of Zimbabwe Arise via Kubatana.net
Zimbabwe is a nation in crisis, a crisis that has been on going since at least the year 2000, but probably dating from 1997, with the collapse of the Zimbabwe dollar, and the exacerbation of the socio-economic crisis. The crisis began in the political sphere and has spread to the economy and all aspects of social interaction, as ill-conceived government policies have turned peoples' lives upside down. The ability to earn a living is drastically curtailed,
basic shelter is compromised by overcrowding or deliberate destruction of housing units by government, and schooling is no longer available to many children. Bare physical survival is at risk through lack of food supplies coupled with the collapse of services, including water, sanitation and health services. Families are divided through the migration of breadwinners, and the whole of life has become a constant, debilitating struggle for the vast majority of Zimbabweans.
Any attempt by political or civic groups to press for alternative policies has been met with repression, effectively cutting off the possibility of working towards improvements in peoples' lives. The ruling party has subverted all electoral processes since 2000, the legislative process, the law enforcement, and judicial processes in favour of its own perpetual rule, with any resistance met by force, both overt and clandestine, actual and threatened. Despite
electoral reform brokered as part of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) mediation process, before the peaceful March 2008 election, a wave of violence and retribution was unleashed on citizens even before the results were announced and continued up to, and beyond, the one-candidate run-off on June 27.
In the context of the desperate situation since 2000, Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) has emerged as a leading rights group calling for change. It is a social justice movement engaged in nonviolent civic action to promote renewal in a politically repressive environment. They claim that their right to freedom of expression has been stifled by unconstitutional legislation, but they aim nevertheless to keep the voice of protest alive. The members demonstrate in the streets and distribute fliers and newsletters calling for government policies which honour the civil and political rights protected in the national constitution, and the economic and social rights guaranteed under international law. They have embraced a programme of peaceful civil disobedience in the face of unjust laws. As is the fate of any other group mounting protests, the women have encountered harassment, brutality and imprisonment at the hands of state agents, who act in breach of their professional and legal obligations.
A recent example of such treatment occurred on 28 May 2008 when 14 members were arrested in Harare during a peaceful procession. After 48 hours in police custody they were taken to court where the magistrate granted bail.
The state appealed against that decision to the High Court and the group was remanded in custody for the appeal period. On 10 June, Judge Hlatshwayo allowed 12 of the accused to be released, but refused bail for two leaders, Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu, saying it would be ‘childish' to grant them bail prior to the presidential run-off. The state argued that these nonviolent human rights defenders would mobilize a Kenyan-style revolt
before the 27 June election. They were eventually granted bail after 37 days in custody. This development shows a clear increase in repression of peace activists, which is a patent echo of the brutality that has been meted out to members of the political opposition, Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) since March 2008.
Research on rights violations experienced by WOZA
In 2007 research was carried out to determine the nature and extent of violations perpetrated on WOZA members by state actors. It used a questionnaire administered verbally to more than 2,000 WOZA members by interviewers from among the WOZA membership. The major results have been detailed in a report released recently.1 They showed a high level of arrests, assaults, torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, primarily by members of various sections of the Zimbabwe Republic Police.
Visit the WOZA fact sheet
To read more about politics and human rights in Zimbabwe, visit Kubatana.net.