NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mukoko relives abduction ordeal

- BY PHYLLIS MBANJE Follow Phyllis on Twitter @pmbanje

TWELVE years after her abduction and torture by suspected State agents, Zimbabwe Peace Project (ZPP) director Jestina Mukoko still has nightmares, while her abductors are running “scot-free”.

On December 3 2008 and during 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence, Mukoko was snatched from her bed by State security agents and endured weeks of torture.

In the same week, two other ZPP staff members, Broderick Takawira and Pascal Gonzo were also abducted.

“Woke up to a nasty dream on this day 12 years ago. The perpetrato­rs are walking scot-free,” Mukoko said in an interview with NewsDay yesterday.

Mukoko and many others have suffered the same fate, but for others like Itai Dzamara, Patrick Nabanyama and Paul Chizuze, their situation was different, their whereabout­s remain unknown.

Human rights defenders are however, piqued by targeted attack on women.

In May, three female MDC youth leaders, Cecilia Chimbiri, Netsai Marova and Joannah Mamombe were abducted, tortured and allegedly sexually-abused.

In August 2019, six masked gunmen abducted popular comedian Samantha Kureya, well known as “Gonyeti” following a skit she had made highlighti­ng police brutality.

Twenty three-year-old Noxolo Maphosa suffered the same fate when she was abducted, sexually assaulted and badly beaten by men looking for her political activist uncle.

These women’s ordeal and that of many other victims of abductions and enforced disappeara­nces, has raised concerns over the human rights situation in Zimbabwe, especially on women.

The country has been recording alarming figures of abductions of human rights defenders with the United Nations disclosing that 49 cases of abductions and torture were reported in the country in 2019, without investigat­ions leading to perpetrato­rs being held to account.

The UN experts have called on government to “urgently prosecute and punish the perpetrato­rs of this outrageous crime and to immediatel­y enforce a policy of “zero tolerance” for abductions and torture throughout the country and “to bring those responsibl­e to account”.

Meanwhile, ZPP has said it will continue to implore the government of Zimbabwe to end abductions, torture and enforced disappeara­nces.

“In the spirit of the 16 days of activism against GBV, we call on the investigat­ion of abductions and enforced disappeara­nces targeting women,” Mukoko said.

The organisati­on has recorded 103 cases of abductions in the past three years, heightenin­g fears that human security, as promised by President Emmerson Mnangagwa in 2017, is no longer guaranteed.

On the occasion of UN Internatio­nal Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappeara­nces in August, Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) urged government to criminalis­e enforced disappeara­nces, investigat­e and prosecute those responsibl­e and take adequate measures to combat the heinous crime.

“Failure by government to hold perpetrato­rs accountabl­e, let alone acknowledg­e the outrageous practice of abductions and enforced disappeara­nces, places abductees outside the protection of the law and constitute a serious violation not only of domestic law, but of internatio­nal law too,” the lawyers grouping said.

 ??  ?? Zimbabwe Peace Project director Jestina Mukoko
Zimbabwe Peace Project director Jestina Mukoko

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