From the Los Angeles Times
Attackers in Zimbabwe are also victims
To save themselves, young men say, they obey
orders to beat President Robert Mugabe's opponents.
From a Times Staff Writer
June 27, 2008
HARARE, ZIMBABWE —
The first time Andrew was forced to beat an opposition party supporter,
he wanted to weep in sympathy. But it would have been suicidal to show
pity on his victim in front of the ruling party youth militia leaders
forcing him to commit the violence.
"You feel like you want to cry, but you don't expose your tears," he
said. "I feel pity beating someone, but there's nothing I can do."
For Andrew and thousands of other young men in Zimbabwe, life has come
down to a painfully simple equation: If you don't beat your victim hard
enough, you may be the next victim.
On the eve of Zimbabwe's discredited presidential runoff today, The
Times spoke to three people who said they were forced to be part of an
intimidation force that has killed, beaten and threatened opponents of
incumbent President Robert
Mugabe.
Reports from independent human rights organizations support the
accounts by the three, who said they had been forced into ruling party
militia bases.
In door-to-door searches in recent weeks, youths acting on behalf of
Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party have randomly rounded up thousands of men
to join them in operating about 900 "reeducation" bases across the
country, designed to intimidate voters into supporting Mugabe.
Andrew said militia members spent their nights drinking beer, smoking
marijuana, singing ZANU-PF liberation war songs, beating drums,
patrolling the neighborhood and beating supporters of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, sometimes with deadly results.
The forced "volunteers" are divided into groups of 15 or 20 and given
iron bars to beat people, Andrew said. The militia members who lead the
attacks carry axes, machetes, knives, and bows and arrows.
"Two times, my group beat someone to death," Andrew said. "I am sure
those people died, because their relatives came to collect the deceased
for burial. They're MDC people. They're the ones being targeted."
Andrew's surname and age and the location of his base are being
withheld because of the risk that he could be killed if identified.
"We beat them hard, even killing them," said Andrew, in his 20s,
who has been forced to go to a base with about 200 other men every
night since June 1. "I have seen six people die."
His hands are rough, but his face is youthful and unlined. His calm
expression belies his internal struggle. Sometimes he feels he's going
mad.
The compulsory shifts at the base are from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. Andrew said
he felt a silent desperation to flee. Yet if he did, he said, his
family would be beaten or killed.
Besides, the national network of militia bases is too extensive to
escape. He would be captured and beaten by militia youths from a base
no matter where he ran.
"We've got nowhere to go," he said.
He stared wistfully into the distance, speaking softly. "I wish I could
find somewhere to stay, somewhere to go, because I feel like I could go
mad somehow. I wish someone would come and help us."
Since Mugabe finished second and ZANU-PF lost its parliamentary
majority in the March 29 national elections, top military and security
chiefs have taken over the party's presidential runoff campaign,
running it as if it were a war.
Ruling party officials allege that Britain is poised to recolonize
Zimbabwe and that the Americans are ready to invade. Opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai, who pulled out of the runoff this week because of the
political violence, is described as a Western puppet.
Andrew and others in the reeducation bases target those previously
seen wearing MDC T-shirts and those who celebrated in bars when the MDC
outperformed ZANU-PF in the March vote. According to Andrew, several
dozen females ages 15 to 25 have been kidnapped to serve as sex slaves
for the ZANU-PF youth militias, war veterans and soldiers at the base.
"They are being raped," he said.
Another forced volunteer, Tendai, also in his 20s, said, "If a girl
doesn't go to the base, her parents will be victimized."
For Tobaiwa, 33, another man forced to stay at a base near Harare, it
has been weeks since he has taken a bath or relaxed.
His sole aim in life is to avoid being beaten or killed. His sweater is
dusty. He looks and sounds exhausted.
For the last two weeks, he has spent every night at the base, going to
work during the day.
"I sleep at the base, except there's no sleep," he said. "If you are
found sleeping, they pour water on you and then they beat you up. . . .
"We will be singing, dancing, going around the neighborhood. If you
meet someone you don't know, you take that person to the base."
The youth militias at the base would demand that the captive recite
ZANU-PF slogans. If he makes a mistake, he is beaten, said Tobaiwa, who
denied taking part in the beatings.
Tobaiwa said he was beaten with a thick wooden stick last weekend for
failing to attend a political reeducation meeting because he was at
work.
"It was a terrifying experience. I thought they would kill me. I felt
really angry. The beating was so thorough I could not walk for two
days," Tobaiwa said.
The level of violence in any area depends on the commanders and
liberation war veterans in charge of the local base. Some ZANU-PF
officials say any means to keep Mugabe in power are justified. Others,
used to spending their days in boardrooms or government offices, seem
more uncomfortable with the violence.
One Harare-area commander, with his elegant suit, soft voice and smile
lines around the eyes, almost winces when asked about the meeting in
his area in which ruling party officials and war veterans decided that
it was necessary to deploy "minimal use of force" to "help" people
understand why they must keep Mugabe after 28 years in office.
His head tilts to the side. He smiles and almost answers the question.
But not quite.
"We don't tell them [the youth militias] to use minimum use of
violence. We just look aside when they go out and gather the people,"
he said, smiling. "Actually we don't talk about minimal use of violence
-- we talk about encouraging people to vote the right way.
"It's like any war. Different commanders use different strategies."
At his base, he said, "we are able to talk and laugh and get people to
loosen up.
"In other areas, the speeches may not be so eloquent. They may use
threats and beat people up. Those areas are so regimented it's like a
military camp."
Some fear that when the election is over, and ZANU-PF is no longer
paying the militias, a new criminal class, trained to beat and kill
people, will be unleashed.
"They will keep on doing the violence," said Ndaziweye, 60, a domestic
worker forced to attend a reeducation meeting Sunday, when militia
members and war veterans threatened to kill people who did not vote for
Mugabe.
"They will jump our fences and beat us and steal our food and property
and blankets."
Tendai said that with every beating he inflicts on someone, he feels he
is also doing some invisible but irreversible damage to himself.
"We feel like victims, forced to kill innocent people who are fighting
for their rights," he said. "This is causing permanent damage to us,
mentally.
"We will remember this time for as long as we live."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times