How Zimbabweans Reacted To Gonyeti’s Arrest

Pindula.com

26th February 2019

Bus Stop TV actor and social media commentator Samantha Kureya was on Tuesday arrested while she was at her home in Mufakose, Harare. Twitter users were full of outrage over the arrest of the popular ‘Gonyeti’. Below are some of the comments made over the arrest:MDC Zimbabwe‏

We are being informed that CID law and order just took Bustop TV’s Samantha Kureya aka Gonyeti from her home for questioning at Harare central. #Freecomicartists @nelsonchamisa

Prof Jonathan Moyo‏

When jokes, let’s be technically correct; when comedy, in fact let’s be constitutionally clear; when freedom of expression invites Gestapo visits from LAW & ORDER in an AUTHORITARIAN MILITARY STATE–which Zimbabwe has become–you must know all hell has broken loose! #FreeGonyeti

Magamba TV : Gonyeti’s only crime is being a comedian who speaks truth to power. Magamba condemns this attack on free speech. We must be free to laugh at our leaders. And our leaders must have a sense of humour!

David Coltart
‏Free Samantha Kureya, otherwise known as the comedian Gonyeti of @bustoptv -who has just been detained by the Mnangagwa regime. Her crime – speaking truth to power, albeit in a very funny way. This brutal regime clearly now has no sense of humour & is petrified of its own shadow.

Chipo Dendere
I was hoping that this was a bad joke but it’s not. A popular Zimbabwean comedian from @bustoptv has been picked up by authorities in Zimbabwe. The two women team often bring humour and joy to people suffering from the current economic & political situation.

uMahambayedwa
Zvino vakatora #Gonyeti viki tinoripedza sei? – with @bustoptv #FreeGonyeti!

Ngonie
#Zimbabwe @ZLHRLawyers has deployed lawyers to offer emergency legal support services to Samantha Kureya, a comedian popularly known as “Gonyeti” of @bustoptv, who has been “picked up from her residence by police & taken to Harare Central Police Station. #FreeGonyeti

Fadzayi Mahere
#FreeGonyeti
RETWEET until it’s not even funny. We want @bustoptv back on our screens and making us laugh!

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Riot police sold a dummy

Bulawayo News 24

12th February 2019

Residents in the western areas of the second city woke up yesterday to see a huge presence of riot police who were anticipating another round of protests.

Apparently, the police were reacting to fake news posted on WhatsApp.

While the police and army have for the past three weeks been a common sight in high density suburbs around Bulawayo, law enforcement agents took their vigilance to another level yesterday.

The Daily News witnessed a number of police officers in full gear in the early hours of yesterday, strategically positioned on different spots in the suburbs with checkpoints on major roads leading to the city centre.

National police spokesperson senior assistant commissioner Charity Charamba could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Police sources said the move was meant to ambush potential protesters after fake news pointing to another protest went viral on social media.

“From Monday 11 February to Friday 15 February 2019, we need to tell our political leadership once again that enough is enough. Enough is enough,” reads one of the WhatsApp posts in part.

“Prices of basic commodities are still going up despite assurances that things will improve. The announced fuel price hikes are causing more pain. Why should we suffer everyday like this? The standard of living has become unbearable while our leaders continue to enjoy themselves at our expense, the taxpayers.

“Our kids are not going to school as teachers are totally incapacitated. They can’t pay our teachers and civil servants a decent salary yet they fly themselves to seek medical services abroad.”

The social media post went on: “Soldiers should return to the barracks and allow us to exercise our constitutional right to protest and petition our leadership. We are not at war. No more bloodshed. Taramba isu”.

Bulawayo, which is usually a quiet city, shocked many last month when its long-suffering residents became violent during a three-day stay-away organised by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions.

The army and police responded with a massive crackdown, in a development that saw hundreds being arrested and tortured.

According to Matabeleland Collective, a grouping of civic society organisations, over 1 000 residents have been subjected to army torture during the crackdown in the aftermath of the protests.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa recently denied any human rights violations by the country’s security details.

 “We would want to see evidence where the 17 people were killed, where were they buried. Let us have the relatives who will say I lost a son, I lost a daughter, I lost a cousin and I lost a relative by the hands of the army,” Mnangagwa said.

Meanwhile, respected lawyer David Coltart came out guns blazing against Mnangagwa’s denial of human rights violations in the country.

“Mnangagwa disputes the fact that several women have been raped and says they should report the crimes to the police,” Coltart said.

 “Rape is a harrowing crime and far more difficult to prove than murder, especially when the crime has been committed against mothers under threat of being shot.

“Mnangagwa should know that as a lawyer. He should know that very few rapes are reported worldwide because of the massive trauma women face, especially because they know that convictions are often difficult to obtain,” he said.

“As a lawyer Mnangagwa should know all of this. So, his dismissal of these allegations is not only disingenuous but also shameful,” fumed Coltart.

“He rather needs to ask himself the questions – who are these women who have told numerous people they have been raped? Are they politicians seeking to score points? If not – and there is no proof of that – why would they concoct these stories, causing shame and anguish for themselves in the process?

“Is there any possibility that they are genuine and that they fear the consequences of reporting to a regime that has shown zero inclination to hold soldiers to account for their actions?”

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Moyo laments attack on city shops

The Standard

10th February 2019

United Refineries CEO Busisa Moyo has lamented the extent of damages suffered by Bulawayo businesses during the January 14 protests, citing the destruction of retail shops especially in high-density areas.

A number of shops were looted after the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions-organised stayaway turned violent.

“This shopping complex with about six shops in Entumbane was looted and then set alight,” Moyo tweeted after touring some of the affected businesses on Friday. “The damage is extensive. Tills and shelfing were taken by looters.

“All the people that worked here are now at home and without work. De-industrialising and now de-retailing of a city is a painful experience.”

He said during the tour he was told by a business owner that the looters appeared well organised.

“A business owner related to me how an advance team of looters had bolt cutters, crow bars and angle grinders and cut his store open.

“They also had explosives and equipment to bust any safe or strongroom open. He managed to get his money from only one of four shops.

“The pharmacy in Cowdray Park was completely looted of medicines and drugs and the owner was brutally attacked by the rioters. He was slashed with a knife and hit with bricks.
“Some shop owners have started to rebuild from own funds but at a low pace.”

Former Education minister David Coltart called for a commission of inquiry to establish who was behind the looting.

“This is shocking and all right-minded people must condemn this,” he tweeted in response to Moyo’s tweets.
“However, we must know the whole truth.

“Much of this was well organised and we need an independent inquiry to see whether there was a third force, which exploited the anger of the people to achieve a political aim.”


Finance minister Mthuli Ncube, who toured the affected businesses on Friday, said the government would avail at least $19 million required by the looted businesses for them to re-open.

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Zimbabwean President Invites Opposition Leaders for Talks

Bloomberg

By Desmond Kumbuka and Godfrey Marawanyika

6th February 2019

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa invited opposition leaders for talks after a violent crackdown on anti-government protests over an economic crisis.

The meeting will take place on Wednesday at State House in the capital, Harare, Madock Chivasa, a spokesman for the opposition National Constitutional Assembly, said by phone. Political leaders who contested last year’s presidential elections can bring three delegates and those who won seats in parliament may be accompanied by an additional representative, Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Misheck Sibanda said in an invitation letter sent to political parties. Thousands of people poured onto the streets of Harare and other major cities such as Bulawayo when the main labor federation called a three-day strike last month after fuel prices were more than doubled to the highest in the world. At least a dozen people were killed and hundreds injured as the army tried to suppress the riots in the most brutal crackdown since independence in 1980.

Thousands of people poured onto the streets of Harare and other major cities such as Bulawayo when the main labor federation called a three-day strike last month after fuel prices were more than doubled to the highest in the world. At least a dozen people were killed and hundreds injured as the army tried to suppress the riots in the most brutal crackdown since independence in 1980. Zimbabwe.

Main opposition leader Nelson Chamisa is “looking into” the invitation, Nkululeko Sibanda, a spokesman for the Movement for Democratic Change, said by phone late Tuesday. Chamisa said on his Twitter account on Wednesday that dialogue to resolve a political crisis in the country should be held under a “credible convener and mediator.” He didn’t say whether or not he’d attend the meeting.

David Coltart, a member of the MDC’s executive, said Wednesday the party had urged those invited to “politely decline” to attend, according to a statement posted on his Twitter account. The politburo of the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front gathered earlier on Wednesday to prepare for the meeting, Obert Mpofu, the party’s secretary for administration, said by phone.

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The West must call out abuse of human rights in Zimbabwe

The National

By David Pratt Foreign Affairs Editor

1st February 2019

WELL done the Church of Scotland. At a time when so much of the international community has been shamefully reticent over atrocities committed in a brutal crackdown in Zimbabwe, it’s been reassuring to see the church calling for intervention.

Some of the reports of human rights abuses emerging from Zimbabwe these past weeks have been appalling. Rights groups have already documented shootings, beatings, random arrests and the widespread use of rape and sexual violence.

Soldiers and unidentified thugs ostensibly seeking to quell protests sparked by a recent 150% hike in fuel prices by the government of president Emmerson Mnangagwa have sometimes gone door to door in neighbourhoods carrying out atrocities.

It’s all a far cry from the positive mood and pronouncements made by Mnangagwa last year when I visited the country and he declared: “Zimbabwe is now open for business.”

The decades of dictatorship by former president Robert Mugabe’s regime were declared to be over then and there was a renewed hope in Zimbabwe.

Up until now Mnangagwa has talked a good game, going on a charm offensive desperate to win the West’s approval.

Indeed his deception almost worked, but in the end what Mnangagwa said and promised and what he delivered in terms of deeds have been miles apart.

In light of recent events in Zimbabwe it’s been noticeable just how quickly those hopefuls in the international community have lost confidence in his capacity to bring about democratic reforms.

As these past weeks have starkly revealed, tyranny and misrule linger, and the current crackdown has all the viciousness of the Mugabe era when Mnangagwa earned his nickname the Crocodile for the ruthlessness and cunning he displayed in doing the dictator’s bidding.

What’s now so evidently clear is that Zimbabwe’s ZANU-PF party political machine run by Mugabe since independence in 1980 is still in command and up to its old ways.

Troubling as this is, it’s equally disquieting just how scarce criticism has been from the international community. Is it perhaps that they placed too much store by Mnangagwa’s promises and now find themselves at a loss to admit their mistake and openly condemn him?

Certainly the UN and other bodies have denounced his government’s “excessive use of force”, but any practical diplomatic pressure being brought to bear on Mnangagwa remains thin on the ground.

Faced with such a desperate situation, ordinary Zimbabweans now need all the help they can get and from wherever genuinely they can get it, without the political strings so often attached from apparent do-gooders in times of crisis.

It’s to the Church of Scotland’s credit then that it has seen fit to speak out on the recent abuses being perpetrated in the country.

This week as a partner of the Church of Scotland, the Council of Churches in Zambia along with other civil groups urged the Zimbabwean government to stop the persecution of its citizens.

In what they described as a “deeply disturbing” crisis, the church group made a plea to leaders in Zimbabwe to be “magnanimous” and address the suffering of the people.

“The onus lies with President Mnangagwa to be all inclusive in finding a lasting solution to the many challenges that the country faces,” the statement said, noting that there is now a “warlike feeling in the air” in parts of the landlocked country, which borders Zambia.

Former Moderator of the Church of Scotland and current convener of its World Mission Council the Very Rev Dr John Chalmers said they fully endorsed the statement of their partners in Zambia and themselves urged the Scottish and UK Governments to make representations. “It is time to restore order and to allow the voices of the most vulnerable to be heard,” said Chalmers.

I for one always feel heartened by those bodies, be they the church, NGOs or civil society groups in Scotland, willing to step up to the plate and do the right thing even though such crises might be a long way from home.

Scotland, of course, has had a long historical connection with many African countries including Zimbabwe, not all of which have always been something to be proud of. Indeed one need only take a tour around certain suburbs of Zimbabwe’s capital Harare to realise this. At least 13 districts or neighbourhoods have names that are readily identifiable with places in Scotland or are of Scottish origin going back to colonial times, including Strathaven, St Andrews Park and Lochinvar to name but three. Many Zimbabwean citizens, too, have Scottish roots or connections.

During one of my earliest visits to the country, I recall meeting and interviewing David Coltart, a Zimbabwean lawyer, politician and a founding member of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) when it was established in 1999.

Born to a Scottish bank manager father and a South African nurse mother, Coltart’s Scottish grandfather was Deputy Lord Provost of Edinburgh in 1938.

Back in 2009 when I met Coltart at his 14th-floor office in a run-down high-rise in Harare, he was to tell me of these family connections and the challenges he faced as newly appointed Minister of Education in a Zimbabwe under the iron rule of Mugabe. An impressive man once targeted by Mugabe’s thugs for assassination because of his opposition to the dictator’s rule, he remained undaunted.

“I’m a pathological optimist,” I recall Coltart saying while pointing out that “perseverance along with gentleness are the best characteristics of the Zimbabwean people”.

Such perseverance and desire to rid the country of the last legacy of Mugabe’s rule continues today with both David Coltart and his son Douglas, a human rights lawyer, still at the centre of that struggle.

Just last week, Coltart the elder described the silence of the international community over the crisis in his country as “deafening”.

On that point he is so right. Perhaps he can take some consolation, however, in the fact that here in Scotland there are those who have had the courage to speak out.

Here’s hoping, too, the Scottish Government acknowledges the Church of Scotland’s admirable lead and makes its own voice heard in condemning those human rights abuses taking place in Zimbabwe right now.

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Lawyers March Against ‘Threat to Rule of Law by Military’

AllAfrica.com

By Jerry Chifamba

29th January 2019

Cape Town — Zimbabwe lawyers have taken to the streets to protest against the alleged abuse of rule of law by the State.

“So proud of my professional colleagues today. Restore the rule of law and constitutional democracy. The army must go back to the barracks,” prominent lawyer and opposition politician Fadzayi Mahere tweeted.

Human rights watchdogs in Zimbabwe have strongly criticised authorities for using troops to quell demonstrations.

Zimbabwe’s Human Rights Commission (ZHRC) has accused security forces of systematic torture, raising fears that the country is reverting to the authoritarianism that characterised the rule of President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s predecessor, Robert Mugabe.

Child Rights International Network says minors have been persecuted. In Zimbabwe “Children as young as 11-years-old have been detained on frivolous charges” related to recent protests, flaunting the government’s lack of respect for their right to freedom of assembly, they said in a statement.

Lawyers and activists say police and soldiers have killed at least a dozen people, wounded scores and arrested hundreds since protests began following a hike in fuel prices. Police say three people died during the protests.

Lawyers and activists say hundreds of Zimbabweans are in custody accused of public order offences, including at least four lawmakers from the opposition MDC party, and Evan Mawarire, a pastor who rose to prominence as a critic of former leader Robert Mugabe and led a national shutdown in 2016.

“I am proud to have this astonishingly brave and competent human rights lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa as my friend. Here she is preparing to march with other lawyers in Harare today to protest the subversion of due process by the Judiciary in #Zimbabwe. Be safe,” tweeted opposition politician David Coltart.

Before winning a contested election in July, Mnangagwa promised a clean break with the 37-year rule of Mugabe, who used the security forces to quell civilian protests.

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Zimbabwe rights groups slam army crackdown

  • Saturday Star
  • 26 Jan 2019
  • By PHATHISANI MOYO Harare

ZIMBABWE human rights organisations have expressed concern about the continuing military crackdown, which they maintain is mostly targeting people living in townships and activists.

Human rights lawyer David Coltart yesterday said the army’s door-to-door crackdown was on homes near areas that had roads barricaded and shops looted during the deadly protests that claimed 12 lives and left 78 with gunshot wounds when soldiers opened fire.

“The army and police crackdown is nationwide but mostly restricted to the high-density suburbs. People are being arbitrarily beaten up and accused of being looters. Civil society leaders are being arrested and denied bail,” said Coltart.

He called the denial of bail and abduction of activists a crime against humanity.

“This shift to targeted leaders of civil society is very worrying. Just today, the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions secretary-general Peter Mutasa was arrested and is behind bars. Many others are in hiding and fear for their lives.”

On Thursday, hundreds of vendors were rounded up and taken to Harare Central Police Station.

“Again they were beaten up and later released without charge.”

Zimbabwe Republic Police spokesperson Charity Charamba refused to comment on the allegations and cut off her cellphone when reported calls were made to her.

Matabeleland Collective, a network of civil society organisations and churches based in Bulawayo, has also registered concerns about the violent aftermath stemming from the 150% raising of fuel prices earlier this month.

“It was worrying to hear and verify reports that heavily armed police and soldiers went door to door indiscriminately assaulting citizens in the dead of night trying to peacefully sleep in their homes.”

It noted such violations in Mabuthweni, Iminyela, Emganwini and Entumbane townships in Bulawayo.

“After kicking the doors open, groups of soldiers and police demanded all male children and adults to come out of their homes and lay down on their stomachs and get thoroughly beaten and threatened for ‘allegedly killing a police officer or sending their children to loot’,” it said.

It estimates that more than 1 000 residents were subjected to this treatment.

Coltart said it was worrying that human rights lawyers were being blocked from helping those being held at different police stations.

“There is a total subversion of the courts, especially the magistrates’ courts. We have received information that magistrates must deny all bail applications.”

Since the return of President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Sunday from a trip to Europe, the crackdown has remained in place in the townships.

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Troops return to Zimbabwe’s streets with a vengeance

Sky News

By John Sparks

24th January 2019

John Sparks visits Bulawayo in Zimbabwe where businesses have been ripped apart and people beaten mercilessly.

Source: Troops return to Zimbabwe’s streets with a vengeance | World News | Sky News

John Sparks visits Bulawayo in Zimbabwe where businesses have been ripped apart and people beaten mercilessly.

Fresh reports have emerged of civilians being beaten by masked men which have led to fears that any promise of a new democracy is nothing but a false dawn

A week of protest, violence and national trauma in Zimbabwe began last week in the country’s second largest city, Bulawayo.

It was here on the morning of 14 January that protesters took to the streets after President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administration raised fuel prices by 150%.

Seized with fury, demonstrators blocked roads and occupied neighbourhoods – and their protests would lead to city-wide looting and rioting.

Shops and business in large swathes of the city were destroyed or stripped bare. I asked the owner of one supermarket in an area called Nkeita what had happened to the police.

“They came late, they were late. Everything was gone when they got here,” he replied.

Business owners told me that they were abandoned by the police and the army for the first three or four days.

Former MP David Coltart thinks the authorities hand over Bulawayo to thugs
Image:Former MP David Coltart thinks the authorities handed over Bulawayo to thugs

Government critics, like lawyer and former opposition MP David Coltart, think that the authorities decided to hand over this independent-minded community to thugs and criminal elements.

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Oliver Mtukudzi, Zimbabwe’s iconic musician of hope, has died

Quartz Africa

23rd January 2019

By Farai Shawn Matiashe & Lynsey Chutel in Harare Zimbabwe

Oliver Mtukudzi, the musician fondly known as Tuku, has died at the age of 66.

Mtukudzi died Wednesday (Jan. 23) at Avenues Clinic in Harare. An international star with a fan base across the continent, Mtukudzi is mourned at home in Zimbabwe and around the region. After a career that spanned four decades and yielded hits like Todii, the guitarist and singer was Zimbabwe’s most successful musical export.

Despite global fame and the trouble in his country of birth, Mtukudzi remained in Zimbabwe. He avoided discussing politics, ignoring critics who urged him to speak up. Instead, he saw his role as an artist to give hope and comfort to his people. He did, however, focus on issues like HIV/Aids and domestic violence, earning him the role of Unicef Goodwill Ambassador.

“I’m very optimistic that Zimbabweans are hopeful things will get right,” he said last year during a radio interview and in the wake of the end of the Mugabe-era.

Mtukidzi at his music academy

Mtukudzi’s death comes exactly a year after South African music legend Hugh Masekela died. They’d first played together in 1983 when Masekela jumped on stage with Mtukudzi’s band in Harare, and continued to play festivals together. When  Masekela fell ill in 2017, Mtukudzi stepped in at a planned festival and headlined a tribute concert last year.

Like Masekela, Mtukudzi regularly collaborated with young Zimbabwean musicians. Last year, he released Ndizarurire with afropop singer Gary Tight. He also established the Pakare Paye Arts Centre in 2003 in Norton outside of Harare to nurture Zimbabwe’s next generation of musicians.

He remained a a regular at festivals while living with diabetes, Just a few weeks ago, Mtukudzi performed at the Nubian Festival in South Africa. And before that in October, he performed at the Kigali Jazz Junction. Last year, he re-released one of his greatest hits Neria, with a collaboration with Ladysmith Black Mambazo. He was also planning to release his 67th studio album this year.

Tuku’s 66th album.

“My 67th album is meant to share a message of introspecting and I’m hoping people learn a thing or two from it,” Mtukudzi told South African media in December. “It’s an album I wrote last year after I realized that the world keeps getting tangled up in unnecessary problems.”

Tributes are pouring in for the musician known for taking his fans to lunch.

“This is sad news, personally I am at a loss for words,” said musician Aleck Macheso.

“Rest in Peace Oliver. If anyone ever made me so proud to be Zimbabwean it was you,” said politician David Coltart. “Thank you for making us so happy especially during the darkest days.”

*Rest in Peace

Lynsey Chutel reported from Johannesburg.

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Fantasy that Mnangagwa would fix Zimbabwe now fully exposed

TheConversation.com

22nd January 2019

As of January 18, more than 12 people had died, no less than 78 had suffered gunshot injuries, and at least 240 had been beaten and tortured by the Zimbabwean state. More than 466 had been arbitrarily arrested and detained, while hundreds are displaced or in safe houses in and outside the country.

Added to that is the shutdown of the internet and social media. All this points to a vicious authoritarian state showing its true face, this time in response to a stay-away protesting a massive petrol price rise.

The latest events are happening in the context of years of economic crisis, and the government’s months-long legitimacy crisis.

The last few days have wiped out any trust people might have had in the ability of the November 2017 coup that toppled former President Robert Mugabe to bring democratic and socio-economic rights to Zimbabwe’s long-suffering people.

Yet one wonders: is this a vicious repressive state or the accumulative effect of institutions that decayed under the doddering Mugabe; now disintegrated, dead and disinterred thanks to diminishing dollars?

Will Zimbabwe’s future be even worse than its terrible past? Can its neighbours bang some heads together to create a “transitional authority” of some sort, as Zimbabwean scholar and activist Professor Brian Raftopoulos suggests?

That’s needed, clearly. But it would not be advisable to raise one’s hopes.

Mugabe’s legacy

A veteran of many struggles against Mugabe once said that the old tyrant’s main problem was his inability to abide people smarter than him. So he surrounded himself with sycophants, and the odd idiot savant.

As another astute Zimbabwean observer put it to me, Mugabe was good at playing the country’s many opposing groups against one another. He would grant one the hope of ascendance, then pull it away in favour of another grasping gang. It created a precarious balance. Now one of the groups has the levers of state in hand, the awkward equilibrium is no more – and the winners are split in all directions too.

With Mugabe gone, the victors – Mnangagwa’s faction of the ruling Zanu-PF â€“ have no idea how to police themselves, let alone an economy, their subjects and the opposition. Harvard professor and emeritus president of the World Peace Foundation, Robert Rotberg, has politely called their plans’ â€œbarmy”.

My guess is that the men and women in charge are following some of the advice of their financial guru Professor Mthuli Ncube. He’s one of those mathematical geniuses whose ideology of short term pain producing fantastical gain needs either a lesson or two in politics or an iron fist. He has the latter.

It’s likely that those charged with implementing “austerity for prosperity” so zealously are fighting among themselves while their soldiers loot and kill on their own, as well as their officers’, will.

As the spoils’ scarcity worsens and power’s centre cannot hold – all in the shadows cast by the near dead – stories of post-coup coups and impeachments pop up. Police spokesperson Charity Charamba even believes the soldiers looting and torturing are people who have stolen their uniforms, so any “retired, deserted, and AWOL” soldiers must

immediately hand over uniforms either to the police or the Zimbabwe Defence Forces”.

A good excuse to round up suspected mutineers?

Chilling warning

President Emmerson Mnangagwa announced the gargantuan increase in fuel prices and then took his begging bowl to the oligarchic remnants of the Soviet ruins. His next stop was due to be Davos where he hoped to charm those with money by repeating his “open for business” mantra. But a 60,000 strong petition helped keep him away.

Mnangagwa has returned from his travels with power retained, although now more tainted than before. He’s likely to be at his crudest. Presidential spokesperson George Charamba promises that so far there has been only seen a “foretaste of things to come”, and that Zanu-PF would â€œrevisit” the sections of the constitution protecting rights of association and expression, “which we now know are prone to abuse by so-called proponents of democracy”.

As this week began, an eerie calm settled. But many civil society and political opposition activist members are still in hiding, lest the fate of teachers’ union president Obert Masaraure, abducted in the early hours of 18 January, tortured, and dumped at Harare’s Central Police Station, befall them.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum also chronicles the torture of Rashid Mahiya’s mother and his pastor. He is the chairperson of Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition and Executive Director of Heal Zimbabwe Trust, and is accused of “masterminding” last week’s protests.

Movement for Democratic Change member and former Minister of Education Senator David Coltart has accused the military and those it has hired of crimes against humanity. In personal communication from Bulawayo he writes that last week’s debacle was a “deliberate campaign to punish the working class people” in his city.

A dream deferred

The nightmare of August 1 last year â€“ when the military brutally clamped down on opposition supporters protesting against the announcement that Mnangagwa had won the presidential election, killing at least six – started to dash the post-Mugabe leader’s dream of legitimacy.

Economic revival might have done the trick: now there’s no chance of that. Last week’s events have exposed the fantasy in full finality. The only Zimbabweans still in the trance are its supposed leaders.

Their neighbours seem caught in it too. They had better wake up before the maelstrom mauls them in the morning.

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