NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

No justice yet for August 1 2018 shooting victims

- BY BLESSED MHLANGA l feedback@newsday.co.zw

VICTIMS of August 1, 2018 shootings have shot down government claims that it had compensate­d them as recommende­d by the Kgalema Motlanthe Commission of Enquiry.

Six people were fatally shot while dozens others sustained gunshot wounds after soldiers indiscrimi­nately fired live ammunition to disperse protestors from central Harare on August 1 2018 following delays in announceme­nt of the presidenti­al results.

After the shootings, President Emmerson Mnangagwa commission­ed a team led by former South African President Kgalema Motlanthe to investigat­e the matter. The commission confirmed that, indeed, soldiers had fired live ammunition on unarmed civilians and recommende­d that the victims be compensate­d while the perpetrato­rs are brought to book, but two years down the line none of the victims has been compensate­d.

Speaking at a National Transition­al Justice Working Group programme to commemorat­e the shootings on Friday, Melody Manyeruke said his deaf and dumb brother Andy, a vendor who was shot in the chest by soldiers, was yet to receive the promised compensati­on or an apology from government.

“For our family, it’s not the truth because government has never made any effort to contact us or communicat­e with us. They know Andy’s case, but they have never done anything. By God’s grace, Andy is still able to continue with his vending work except that the lockdown issue has affected him,” he said.

Manyeruke said the 46-year-old Andy was hopeful that one day justice would prevail.

“Nobody can go through that ordeal of being shot and almost die and you know you are innocent. Yet you live through (it) and those responsibl­e don’t acknowledg­e that what they did is wrong. It needs a lot of grace from God for someone to become normal after such a situation,” he said.

“Before the issue of compensati­on, at least an acknowledg­ement of the fact that he was wronged from the State is something that would be very positive for him and also for us as a family, rather than a situation where they just keep quiet as if nothing happened. Then on the issue of compensati­on, he is somebody who is living with disability, he needs some kind of assistance.”

ZimRights director Dzikamai Bere blasted government for “lying” that it was helping the victims.

“Mr Manyeruke is a representa­tive of citizens out there who have been hurt and continue to get hurt by the State. The fact that a government official finds it more important to come to a journalist and lie about compensati­on for victims and they have made no attempt to get in touch with the families tells you there is no humanity in that policy,” he said.

Bere called on Mnangagwa to take the nation out of protracted political disputes.

“Why I say that there is no humanity is because issues of transition­al justice are built by leadership with compassion. It means they say we understand and appreciate that we have hurt each other in the past and the State is the main actor in contributi­ng to that pain, we want to correct this and the people who are at the centre are those who have been hurt the most,” he said.

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