Prison Zimbabwe: Opposition leaders held as they try to leave the country
Mugabe continues to crank up the tensions in Zimbabwe. After forbidding key opposition leaders from leaving the country he has also stolen the body of a murdered activist to prevent his funeral from taking place.
And the story of the arrest of opposition leaders at the airport is proving to be a much more violent one than the stories I reported on yesterday have led us to believe.
It is clear that Mugabe is going to any lengths to prevent people giving first hand accounts of what is taking place to the rest of the world.Nelson Chamisa, the national spokesman for the main opposition party Movement for Democratic Change, was fighting for his life last night in a Harare hospital after being ambushed in an airport departure lounge by plain-clothes agents wielding iron bars.
The assault and arrests, following on from threats to expel foreign envoys, marked a new clampdown from a government determined to strangle domestic dissent and prevent international support from reaching opposition groups.
Eyewitnesses said the senior member of the MDC was set upon by eight assailants who knocked him to the ground and administered a severe beating. Initial reports suggested Mr Chamisa's injuries were far worse than those suffered by the MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, in an incident that has drawn international condemnation of the Mugabe regime.
"[Mr Chamisa] was beaten on the head with iron bars. There was blood all over his face. He is in a critical condition at a private hospital in Harare," the party's secretary general, Tendai Biti, said from Johannesburg.
"Mugabe is clearly not relenting on violence against opponents," said Mr Biti. "All indications are that some in the opposition leadership will have to pay the ultimate price as this regime becomes more crude ... We won't be deterred however. The writing is on the wall for Mugabe."Mugabe is going to ever more desperate lengths, which does lend some credence to those who see "the writing on the wall" for his regime, but one can't help but feel that Mugabe has even more desperate depths that he has yet to plummet, unless outside forces - by which I, of course, mean Mbeki of South Africa - intervene.
A police force who behave with such little respect for court orders are, in actual fact, little more than a private Mugabe militia. One shudders to think how you would go about rebuilding such a force when Mugabe fell. You would almost literally have to rip it up and start again.On Saturday, agents from Mr Mugabe's secret police, the CIO, stole the body of Gift Tandare, an activist shot dead by police after the breakup of a peaceful prayer meeting last weekend. Mr Tandare's body was taken from a Harare morgue on Saturday where it was being prepared for burial. Authorities were concerned that his funeral would be a magnet for street protests.
The police also ignored a high court order to return Mr Tandare's body. Two lawyers, Otto Saki and Tafadzwa Mugabe, said high court judge Sam Kudya had ordered the police to produce the body, hand it over to his family and avoid interfering with his burial proceedings. The lawyers said that the court order was torn up and thrown in the bin by an assistant police commissioner when it was served.
However, there are faint signs that Mugabe's grip on power may indeed be coming to an end.
The man who could easily give the administration a push that would topple it over the edge, the South African president Thabo Mbeki, has remained resolutely silent. His silence is a stain on his presidency. How many must die before Africa says, "Enough"?Statements from Mr Mugabe in recent days have revealed deep divisions in his own party and suggested the autocratic leader has an insecure grip on a country he has ruled for the last 27 years. Speaking in Harare on Saturday, Mr Mugabe accused the opposition of resorting to violence sponsored by the former colonial power, Britain and other Western allies. "We have given too much room to mischief-makers and shameless stooges of the West. Let them and their masters know that we shall brook none of their lawless behaviour."
Analysts took the statement to be a coded reference to senior members of his own Zanu PF party, who have been in clandestine meetings with foreign envoys aimed at securing support for a transitional government if Mr Mugabe is toppled.
The 83-year-old president railed against what he called a "desperate and illegal plot to unconstitutionally change the government of the country".
The fact that Mr Mugabe has so far failed to secure unanimous cabinet support for declaring a state of emergency is the clearest indication yet of divisions in the ruling party. No move had been taken against the diplomats threatened with expulsion at the time of going to press.
Zimbabwe is facing a critical moment, Mr Tsvangirai said by telephone from Harare where he is recovering. "Things are bad," he told the BBC, "but I think that this crisis has reached a tipping point, and we could see the beginning of the end of this dictatorship in whatever form."
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