Raped Zimbabwean Women Seek Justice
Exiles group spearheads bid to bring their plight to the attention of the
international courts.
By Zakeus Chibaya in Johannesburg (AR No. 108, 13-Apr-07)
Still visibly
traumatised and walking with the help of a stick, Zimbabwean Silibaziso Tembo
vividly recounts being tortured by ruling party Zanu-PF agents, which has left
her paralysed.
Her main sin was her participation as an election agent
for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, party in the resort town
of Victoria Falls in the 2005 parliamentary election.
After surviving
several attacks in 2000 from the youth militia and war veterans who spearheaded
the Zanu-PF orgy of violence, she finally succumbed during Operation
Murambatsvina, a clean-up campaign which left 700,000 families homeless and
without a source of livelihood.
Her back-yard house and tuck shop was
targeted by the Zanu-PF activists who gang raped her, and destroyed her
home.
Tembo fled to South Africa across the dangerous Limpopo River to
seek medical treatment and refuge. Her dream is to see her perpetrators brought
to book. As the justice and police system in Zimbabwe has failed to prosecute
the culprits, she is putting her hopes on the international justice
system.
“I would like to see the culprits brought to a trial court and
answer for their crimes. The government of Zimbabwe should take responsibility
for the brutality, rape and torture, which was orchestrated by the Central
Intelligence Organisation and Zanu-PF thugs. I am prepared to stand in the
courts to give evidence of torture,” said a sobbing Tembo. “I used to work for
myself but Mugabe’s brutality reduced my life to a destitute.”
The
period between 2000 and 2006 has witnessed an upsurge of political violence,
which has left many women activists supporting the MDC raped and tortured. Women
form a large number of Zimbabweans fleeing the country.
Zimbabwe Exiles
Forum’s executive director Gabriel Shumba, who is spearheading the litigation
process to bring the matter to the attention of international courts, said, “We
have filed three communications (petitions) with the African Commission on Human
and Peoples’ Rights against the Republic of Zimbabwe, which we hold vicariously
liable for the perpetration of these violations through its agents.”
The
majority of the victims were abused by members of the Zanu-PF state security
machinery, such as the CIO, the army intelligence department and youth militia,
commonly known as the "green bombers". ZEF has also prepared three more
communications for the commission and two complaints will be shortly placed
before the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture.
The commission
was established under the terms of Article 30 of the African Charter on Human
and Peoples' Rights. The body consists of eleven independent members elected for
a term of six years. It normally holds two ordinary sessions annually, one
around March/April and the second around September/October, each meeting lasting
two weeks.
“More abused women are coming forward and we are determined to
take their cases to the international courts,” said Shumba.
Since 2003,
Zimbabwe civic organisations based in South Africa have received numerous
reports of cases of women who say they have been raped and tortured either
directly or indirectly by state agents. Zimbabwe Political Victims’ Association,
ZIPOVA, an exiled Zimbabwe organisation that is assisting in the litigation
project, said they are seeing between five to ten abused women a week.
A
project has been launched at ZIPOVA to give abused women confidence to stand up
for their rights. The women meet once a week to receive counselling and to
discuss their experiences of torture and brutality.
Giyatri Sigh, of the
Witwatersrand University’s Forced Migration Department, who has carried out
preliminary research on exiled, abused Zimbabwe women, said, “There is rampant
abuse of Zimbabwean women, even in South Africa. There is a need to document the
abuses and seek recourse.”
A young woman living in exile in South Africa
told IWPR of how she was intermittently abducted by CIO operatives between 2004
and 2006 when she was still in high school. She reported that she was forced to
join them because her father was a member of the Zimbabwe National Army and she
was an MDC activist. She was moved between army barracks and shown people who
were viewed as anti-government being tortured and sometimes killed. During her
captivity she was repeatedly raped.
ZEF has established through extensive
research that an alarming number of Zimbabwean women suffer sexual and other
physical abuse in the country, and by border officials while trying to escape
from Zimbabwe.
One of the most horrific cases is that of Muchaneta Gomo,
who was gang-raped by four members of the youth militia at Mushagashe Youth
Militia Training Centre near Masvingo. One of the group forced the barrel of a
rifle into her private parts during the ordeal.
“I know my culprits very
well. Some of the CIO’s and youth militias I have seen in South Africa on a
mission to spy on exiled Zimbabweans. We are ready to demand justice for women.
I no longer feel intimidated by the regime,” said Gomo, who is in her early
20s.
Gomo had enrolled at Mushagashe to train as a carpenter, but then
discovered that the centre is used to train and teach youths about Zanu-PF
ideology. On many occasions they were sent on missions to attack opposition
supporters. When she asked questions about her studies, she was beaten and
raped.
There are about fifteen youth militia centres in the country that
operate as training facilities. Women are abused at the centres as the
supervisors take advantage of the vulnerability of the young
girls.
Shumba is optimistic that the abused women will triumph at the
international courts. He successfully took his case to the commission and the
Zimbabwean government was asked to respond to the allegations.
Tembo
said, “We are ready to face Mugabe in the courts to answer for his brutality and
I have enough evidence to prove my case. Someone has to pay for the atrocities
inflicted on Zimbabwean women. We will be representing many Zimbabwean women who
have died because of Mugabe’s brutality.”
Zakeus Chibaya is a regular
IWPR contributor.