Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Opposition takes up arms as Zimbabwe slides into civil war

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 11 July 2008
FRUSTRATED supporters of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in Zimbabwe have begun arming themselves to fight back against ruling party security forces and militias, leading research organisations said yesterday.
The country has never been as close to civil war as it is now, following the controversial one-candidate election of 27 June, in which Robert Mugabe was returned to power for another five years, says the report, entitled Saving Zimbabwe.

The repo
rt is to be published today by South Africa's publicly funded Human Sciences Research Council, based in Johannesburg, and the Africa Policy Institute, based in Nairobi and Pretoria.

Kwandiwe Kondlo, the chief of the council's democracy research programme, said the failed electoral process was "a recipe for civil war because there is no yielding ground. A low-intensity war has begun and the situation is getting out of control."

He said violent retaliation was not MDC policy, but localised "democratic resistance committees" had been established to counter the violence of Mugabe's Zanu-PF party. "Hell is being let loose," he said. "We do know almost certainly that some of them (MDC supporters] have begun (military-style] training.

"The culture of violence that comes from Zanu-PF is gradually becoming part of the culture in the MDC."

The MDC said that the confirmed death toll of its supporters since the first election, on 29 March – in which MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai outpolled Mr Mugabe by 47 per cent of the total vote to 43 per cent – has risen to 110.

The latest person to die was a 70-year-old woman who was beaten and thrown on to a fire in the nickel-mining town of Bindura, the MDC said. She was attacked by Zanu-PF militiamen in June but died only yesterday from "terrible burns."

More than 1,500 people, including MDC lawmakers, remain in police custody, a party spokesman said.



The full article contains 323 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 10 July 2008 10:58 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Zimbabwe
 
1

El_Kabooko,

Sacramento 11/07/2008 01:12:16
When people watch their children starve to death because of the stupidity of a despot, they will have no recourse except to take up arms.

All I know that once the shooting starts, the UN will be useless until half a million people are dead and then the white vans will roll in and food aid will flow to the surviors. Zimbabwe's neighbors should be ready for a massive influx of refugees.
2

tomi,

11/07/2008 03:55:48
It is time for the world to arm the people of Zimbabwe to defend themselves and to fight and overthrow Mugabe and his henchmen. A.S.A.P.
3

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta CA ..Obama smoke n mirrors..McCain is Bus 11/07/2008 06:28:55
The latest person to die was a 70-year-old woman who was beaten and thrown on to a fire in the nickel-mining town of Bindura, the MDC said. She was attacked by Zanu-PF militiamen in June but died only yesterday from "terrible burns."
--------------------------------------


Hey Dudes,
Yet another Rwanda in the making !!!.
Surprise surprise

Tribal Africa wins the GOLD Medal for mass murder of their own kind .

While the West looks on as spectators.

How different is that from the spectators in the Coliseum watching the Gladiators battle the lions to the death.

GC.
4

oder,

Scotland 11/07/2008 07:52:35
seems little choice for the people of Zimbabwe, the failure of the world and Mbeki in particular, the world must not allow Mbeki to arm Mugabe his terrorist brother.
5

Victoria,

East Lothian 11/07/2008 08:06:37
It's a terrible shame it has had to come to this, but they have tried voting him out and it has failed and the rest of the world has sat back and watched as Mugabe continued to torture and kill his own people and refuse to acknowledge democracy. You couldn't really blame them for taking this next step. If civil war does break out then the blame falls a lot wider than the MDC or Mugabe who could have been stopped in his tracks easily by the other African nations, or indeed by the UN.
Why has nothing been done? Well quite simply the UN are terrified of another Somalia and some of the other African nations probably quite like the possibility that they may be able to do the same as Mugabe to hold onto power when their time comes, so nobody else will be coming to the aid of the people of Zimbabwe, small wonder they have decided to try and resolve the problem themselves the only way they can.
6

Media 1,

cape town 11/07/2008 08:54:52
This story is a lie.
I dont know where the journalist got his information, but on local South African radio stations earlier this morning we heard that the only people who have access to weapons in Zimbabwe are those loyal to Zanu PF.
MDC supporters have a difficult enough time getting food and water, so obtaining guns is far fetched to say the least.
Mugabe has strangled the opposition and their supporters, they have nothing. No hope and no life and they are certainly unable of taking on his henchmen and the army.
THIS STORY IS A LIE
7

Gulliver,

Harare 11/07/2008 13:10:43
If this story were true, I would say in my opinion route of armed conflict would not be feasible, acceptable, or suitable in Zimbabwe's situation. The situation is not a tribal or racial thing where it is easy to pin-point or distinguish between supporters of one party or another. We have members of the same household, in the same family on different sides of the political divide. Such a war would be senseless and not practical. The way the people voted in March 29 elections where there was an almost even split in the votes between the two main parties shows how balanced the sides are. Many MDC supporters are in fact former supporters of ZANU PF (Tsvangirai included!), pursuing armed conflict would not be a viable route.
8

Jay Kay,

11/07/2008 13:14:53
#7 Gulliver, If the people manage to arm themselves we will soon see how many actually DO support Mugabe, im thinking there wont be that many.
9

Neil,

Glasgow 11/07/2008 14:40:13
I do not think the people of Zimbabwe benefit from outside western organisations telling them lets you & him fight.
10

Gulliver,

Harare 11/07/2008 15:27:14
# 8 you could be right hey. I know of some people in the police and army who were not happy about how their postal ballots were done... On the other hand, Zimbabwe has a reputation when it comes to respecting the chain-of-command. In addition a number of the people manning those vital organs in recent times were recruited from the National Youth Service. The top brass is composed of former guerrillas who are 100% loyal to ZANU PF and it's ideals 1st (being founders), and RG 2nd.
11

Erchie Broon,

11/07/2008 15:38:45
#6 Media 1
How can you say the story is a lie when the HSRC has been on TV in South Africa making the statement? The only possibility that it is a lie is that the HSRC is just another arm of the ANC spouting their rhetoric trying to lay blame on th MDC. Local radion in South Africa? When you start believing any Media in South Africa who are dependant on the ANC for their licence then you are swallowing the ANC propaganda. I assume you are referring to Cape Talk which is the most looney Left radio station I d the misfortune to listen to.
12

Gulliver,

Harare 11/07/2008 15:44:43
point of correction.. a portion of that was meant to read, ".. the Zimbabwean security forces have a reputation when it comes to respecting the chain of command..".
13

Gulliver,

Harare 11/07/2008 15:59:32
The "DRCs" mentioned in the report are not a new thing in Zimbabwean politics. I would not put the possibility of considering a military strategy beyond the consideration of the MDC- not necessarily its supporters in the mainstream- but its leaders because they might miscalculate and believe the support from America and its allies would be sufficient. I doubt such support would be forthcoming given the "success" of such "allies" military interventions in Iraq and Afganstan.
14

Neal! Whit? Haud yer Whisht!!,

11/07/2008 16:28:45
Mugabe should be made to Scream for what he's done, Scream for Mercy, Scream for Release, Scream for Death . . . Farking Savage!
15

Media 1,

cape town 11/07/2008 20:52:01
Erchie

No not at all. But in Zimbabwe, the MDC supporters are suffering at the hands of the brutal Mugabe regime to the point that limbs are being cut off, people are being savegely beaten, woman raped and children murdered. We see the images everyday, I work with 3 Zimbabweans, one of whom were home 2 weeks ago to fetch his mother and sister, he had to sneak them out,the stories are horrendous.

MDC supporters dont even have water or bread so how they have guns is beyond me. But I GUESS you will be able to tell us.
The ANC are telling us that the opposition are fighting back, but then again, they support Mugabe so go figure.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 

Featured Advertising



Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.