PDA

View Full Version : Zimbabwe youth militias accused of holding women as *** slaves



Laworkerbee
07-07-2008, 01:50 PM
One 21-year-old says she had hoped that her ordeal would end after the presidential runoff, but the terror continues.

HARARE, ZIMBABWE -- She has to call the young men her "comrades." She cooks food for the comrades and serves them. She sweeps the comrades' floor and cleans up after them.

And whenever any of the comrades want ***, she is raped.

Asiatu, 21, is a prisoner of the comrades at a command base of the ruling ZANU-PF party, one of 900 such camps set up by the party to terrorize Zimbabweans into voting for Robert Mugabe in the one-man presidential runoff late last month and extending his 28-year rule.

The election is over, but the terror isn't.

"I'm still at the base. I'm being raped by four or five men daily," she whispers, bursting into tears. "Any time they want, night or day.

"To me, a comrade is a murderer, someone who's cruel."

She has been at the base for about 10 weeks, ever since she was abducted in the middle of the night because her mother is a supporter of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.

She has to stay most of each day and night at the base, a *** slave of the thuggish youth militias unleashed by the government. The Times interviewed her during one of the several short daily periods she is allowed to leave the ZANU-PF base.

When asked why she doesn't escape during that time, Asiatu gives a chilling explanation: "They promised me if I run away, my mother will be killed."

A slight, pretty figure, about 5 feet tall, Asiatu wears a flowing black dress with splashes of red. Her braids are tied back by an extravagant puff of red tulle. Her eyes are sad and fearful. And she rarely smiles.

She says she looked forward to the June 27 runoff and the result, assuming that she would be freed.

But with the election over and no sign of her imprisonment ending, she has lost hope. She is fearful she may be pregnant, and terrified she may have HIV/AIDS. She is the sole breadwinner in her family, earning some money selling vegetables, but has not been able to because she spends most of her time at the base.

"I pray to God most of the time. I pray, 'You are the one who knows my future. Help me. Stop this happening to me.' "

A base commander who spoke to The Times on condition of anonymity said that Mugabe had said the bases would continue to operate. Some in the ruling party say new operations are being planned. But the commander said that there was no government money to feed the youth militias at the bases and that supporting them had become difficult.

That could be a problem for ZANU-PF: For most of the young shock troops, their main motivation is the hope of a quick dollar to feed their families, with food scarce and opportunities to get ahead almost nonexistent.

The camps were set up after ZANU-PF's defeat in the March 29 parliamentary and presidential elections. They provided a base from which to target the opposition and intimidate voters -- burning houses, displacing people and beating, maiming or killing activists.

Kindergartens, schools and houses were commandeered for the bases. Some outposts, deep in the bush and modeled on the bases of Zimbabwe's liberation war, consist of nothing more than a piece of land with a tent, a desk and a chair for the commander, with several hundred militia fighters standing guard.

In most of the bases across the country, young women have been forced to cook for the youth militias, serve them and be their *** slaves, according to young women and men forced to attend the camps daily.

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai withdrew from the June 27 runoff vote because of the violence. But Mugabe, who finished second to Tsvangirai in March, pushed ahead with the runoff despite international condemnation. He was declared the winner soon afterward and hastily inaugurated.

The MDC reports many cases of unwanted pregnancies among victims of rape. Written testimonies by victims show that many times women were raped because they or their close relatives were MDC activists. However, the party does not have a tally of how many rapes have been reported in the political violence.

Asiatu's ordeal began one afternoon when 35 ZANU-PF militia members came to her house because her mother is an MDC member.

"I was eating and they kicked my food," she says. "They started beating me, saying I was an MDC member. They said I should be killed." Three days later they came at night and forced her to go to the base.

"I was just crying. I thought they wanted to kill me," she says.

To protect her, The Times is not disclosing the location of the base. She does not go by the name Asiatu in her community.

On her first day at the base, she says, she was severely beaten on her back, buttocks and the soles of her feet with wooden poles.

"They said they should leave me to faint in order to satisfy their bosses. They said they were 'treating' me to make me a ZANU-PF member."

After a week, the daily beatings stopped, but the rapes began.

Wiping tears from her eyes, she describes the first time: "Someone came and gave me a plate of sadza [the staple cornmeal porridge] and said, 'Go in that room with this plate of sadza.' And there was a man sleeping in bed and he raped me."

There are three women at the base, she says. The number of militia members there has dropped to 11 from 50 before the election. There are political meetings at the base, with songs and slogans.

"I just go to save my life. But I will never be ZANU-PF," Asiatu says. She has hated ZANU-PF since her mother's younger sister was kidnapped and slain in political violence after 2000.

Before the election, she says, she saw hundreds of people beaten at the base, about 10 to 50 people a day. She says she saw two MDC activists stoned to death. Militia members pelted the two with bricks and rocks, taking about three hours to kill the men.

"They said, 'They are activists of the MDC, so they should be killed in order to kill the MDC.' "

Elizabeth, 30, an MDC activist and vegetable seller, says she was raped at the same base before the election. She says some militia members wore sacks or cardboard boxes on their heads to hide their faces. (Elizabeth also is not known by that name in her community.)

As she was raped, militia members and other young women at the base sang songs taunting the opposition, such as, "Dig a hole and bury yourself, because your time has come."

"It made it more terrifying. I didn't think I was going to survive," she says.

Unlike Asiatu, she was not kept at the base as a *** slave, but raped as a punishment for her MDC loyalties. She later reported the names of her assailants to the police, who arrested two men. But they were released two days later without charges.

"Right now I fear they will come again," says Elizabeth, who has decided to drop out as an MDC activist. "I just want to live a quiet life. I'm just scared. But I'll still support the MDC."

Full depressing article found here
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-sexslave7-2008jul07,0,5401767.story?page=2

vinny_121_ND
07-07-2008, 03:38 PM
sad that only savage animals run that country.

Rudolph
07-07-2008, 03:39 PM
If anyone has ever wondered whether they are animals.... bring back Ian Smith! At their worst they never did this to the black population, much less to their own people. What I really wanna say will get me banned though....

playtym
07-07-2008, 04:20 PM
It's mainly about the vote rigging, but there's some discussion in this video (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2008/jul/04/election.zimbabwe) of these "bases" and women being abducted by ZANU PF and taken to these "bases".

The Balkan
07-07-2008, 04:41 PM
There's animals everywhere. Only difference is most places don't have this state of absolute lawlesness for the animals to take advantage of.

Cava
07-07-2008, 04:59 PM
Why nobody do anything?

Because there is no oil?

Laworkerbee
07-07-2008, 05:21 PM
Why nobody do anything?

Because there is no oil?

I'm pretty ****ing tired of that immature comment popping up.

Macs.
07-07-2008, 05:23 PM
I'm pretty ****ing tired of that immature comment popping up.

Oil or not, there is some truth in it.

There is no real interest in fixing that place, so...

No one is gonna ride in on a white horse and resuce the people from this ****ty situation, just so he can sleep better at night.

Laworkerbee
07-07-2008, 05:43 PM
Oil or not, there is some truth in it.

The simple fact is nobody wants to bleed for Zimbabwe, oil or no oil, he implies as everyone does that makes that dumbass statement that the Americans would land and sort everything out if there was some black gold under the ground, which is pure horse****.

Other than that I completely agree with your post as it is realistic.

Bia
07-07-2008, 05:57 PM
Zimbabwe youth militias accused of holding women as *** slaves


You know what else is depressing?
This doesnt shock me.

:(

Laworkerbee
07-07-2008, 06:04 PM
You know what else is depressing?
This doesnt shock me.

:(

It seems to be becoming the norm in Africa, those Liberians and Congolese were real trend setters.

Macs.
07-07-2008, 06:07 PM
There is alot of **** going on in many places down there.

Just be happy that no one is sending your countrymen to work in these ****-holes, trying to make a difference.

EUFOR Congo worked out so great... :roll:

I really wonder if we ever will see a real peace in those countries. I doubt it will happen in our live-times. Well, in mine maybe, but not in LAworkerbees. He is too old. RIP.

Laworkerbee
07-07-2008, 06:13 PM
EUFOR Congo worked out so great... :roll:

Well it was an attempt anyway and should be commended.

As often as I state there should be no Western interference in Africa and they should be left to sort out their own problems I have a tough time thinking along the same lines after reading articles like this.

Perhaps the re-colonialization of certain parts of Africa is the only way to "save it"? :|

Ulytau
07-07-2008, 06:17 PM
Sad thing this pigs raping babies etc. too..

Holdin em all somewhere and killin slowly all of em ''Especially their leaders' will be greatest idea..

Macs.
07-07-2008, 06:19 PM
Well it was an attempt anyway and should be commended.

As often as I state there should be no Western interference in Africa and they should be left to sort out their own problems I have a tough time thinking along the same lines after reading articles like this.

Perhaps the re-colonialization of certain parts of Africa is the only way to "save it"? :|

Even if it was politically accepted by the West, which will obviously not happen, imagine what the people in Congo, Zimbabwe etc would do to "real" foreigners... Not so much that I doubt that western Armys couldn't easily overpower these nations/populations with use of force, but you would not be able to occupy such places in the long run, because the western populations would not tolerate something like this for a long time.

During EUFOR our army did gather alot of intelligence, and it was clear that most Congolese would accept the mission so far, but majority still "hated" everything white, and they would only calm down because they knew that the EU troops were too powerful, and the political situation was open, so that we would leave right after the paper work was done. Still there have been some hot situations.

If you really would try to colonize, I believe it would only work with force, and that is not acceptable by western standards.

Laworkerbee
07-07-2008, 06:51 PM
Can you imagine trying to argue in favor Colonialism to "help" people rofl

btdown
07-07-2008, 06:53 PM
Why nobody do anything?

Because there is no oil?Spoken like a true european...You guys have an army--I dont see you championing the cause........Why must you always wait for the USA to stand up and do something (and then turn around and criticize them because you dont like the manner in which they take care of business)?

SBL
07-07-2008, 07:02 PM
Can you imagine trying to argue in favor Colonialism to "help" people rofl
Doesn't seem so outlandish to me.:-(
In theory, at least.

playtym
07-08-2008, 03:25 AM
Why must you always wait for the USA to stand up and do something

Because you guys are Team America, World Police. F*ck yeah! p-)

wilhelm
07-08-2008, 06:56 AM
It seems to be becoming the norm in Africa, those Liberians and Congolese were real trend setters.

LA, I'm afraid that this not a trend. TIA. Anybody born here can tell you this. I think though, that any blowback effect will affect Europe far greater than the US.

We who have lived on this continent and have had our forefathers here for the last 350 odd years tried to explain this during the 1970's and 1980's. We were shouted down and ostracized. I would absolutely agree with most that the system then was not perfect, and certainly needed drastic change. But a more measured and phased approach to change would have been far better.

There is massive pressure on Europe due to illegal immigration. This is due to chaos in Africa. IMHO this will get a lot worse, particularly due to Europes paralysis when dealing with gross mismanagement/warlordism/dictatorship that is so prevelant on the African continent. Perhaps you will see greater non-integrated ghettos in European cities made up of unskilled violence/economic refugees. Already compare from the first wave of independance in the 60's to now with regards to population make-up. I'm not talking about a skilled person from whatever ethnicity contributing to the country harbouring them. I can't say I'll be sorry.

As ye sow, so shall ye reap.:-(