>From the latest Weekly Worker: 
>http://www.cpgb.org.uk/article.php?article_id=1004324


         

Weekly Worker 857 Thursday March 17 2011 
Release the six
Peter Manson calls for solidarity with Zimbabwean comrades

 
On Wednesday March 16 the six leftwing militants still being held in Zimbabwe 
on ludicrous, trumped-up charges of treason were finally granted bail - at 
US$2,000 per head. The International Socialist Organisation, to which three of 
the comrades belong, has launched an urgent appeal to raise the necessary 
$12,000.

Until the cash is handed over, the ordeal of Munyaradzi Gwisai, Tafadzwa Choto, 
Tatenda Mombeyarara, Hopewell Gumbo, Edson Chakuma and Welcome Zimuto will 
continue. They have been held since February 19, when police broke up a meeting 
in solidarity with the movement for democracy in Tunisia and Egypt and arrested 
a total of 46 people for “plotting to subvert the government by 
unconstitutional means”. Since then, the six have suffered appalling treatment, 
including severe beatings, denial of food and medical attention, and solitary 
confinement in filthy conditions.

Edzai Matica, who works alongside comrade Gwisai in the Zimbabwe Labour Centre 
and describes himself as a “de facto member of the ISO”, told me: “From the 
19th to the 24th, when they were taken to court for the first time, the six 
were all beaten. They believe it was people from the Central Intelligence 
Organisation, not police officers, who assaulted them.” They were made to lie 
on their stomachs and comrade Gwisai, a former member of parliament in the 
early days of the Movement for Democratic Change, reports receiving between 15 
and 20 blows in one torture session.

The female comrades were not spared this brutality - including comrade Choto, 
who suffers badly from asthma and an ongoing condition for which she has 
recently had three operations. As with all the others, she was denied the 
medication and treatment she needs until the prisoners won a court order after 
two weeks, giving them the right to be examined by a doctor of their choice. 
The aim of the CIO state thugs was to ‘persuade’ the comrades to confess to 
subversion (not at this stage “treason”, a charge which was sprung on them at a 
subsequent court appearance) - or at least become a state witness. One of those 
arrested actually agreed to testify for the prosecution and was promptly 
released under police protection. But all the others adamantly refused to 
betray their comrades, maintaining that it is not a crime to fight for the 
interests of the working class and progressive movements.

A further 37 people were released on March 7, the magistrate ruling they had no 
case to answer. Not all of them had even been at the meeting, which the police 
used as their excuse for their draconian action. Comrade Matica said: “I 
believe five of them were arrested just for being in or near the building where 
the meeting was taking place, but they had nothing to do with it.”

The six comrades still being held were particularly targeted for their role in 
the movement. ISO members Choto and Mombeyarara are, like Munyaradzi Gwisai, 
Zimbabwe Labour Centre officers, while Hopewell Gumbo is a former president of 
the Zimbabwe National Union of Students and prominent anti-debt campaigner. 
Comrade Zimuto is another NUS activist, and Edson Chakuma is an Ufawu union 
militant.

So they continue to endure unspeakable conditions - at least for the moment, 
until sufficient US dollars can be raised for their bail, which, hopefully, 
will be within a day or so. Comrade Matica told me: “There is no running water, 
and no blankets - they are just sleeping in their clothes.” Virtually no food 
is provided, except by friends and relatives, and even then it can only be 
taken in the afternoon. People attempting to take the comrades supplies in the 
early evening have been turned away. “They were held in solitary confinement 23 
hours a day”, and this included being manacled for days at a time. “They are 
complaining about the lice. I could see Munyaradzi has developed some kind of 
rash on his face caused by the lice. You can see frustration on their faces. 
They’ve been held so long now - almost a month since they were arrested.”

Comrade Matica himself had, obviously, not been at the solidarity meeting, but 
had been able to piece together what had gone on from his numerous prison 
visits and discussions with the released comrades: “The meeting was to discuss 
the lessons of Tunisia and Egypt, with invited speakers to lead the discussion. 
They were watching a video, which actually consisted of different news reports 
from international channels like CNN, Sky and Al Jazeera - I have seen one of 
the disks. It was of demonstrations and so on.”

The meeting had started at about 2pm, but was broken up by about 100 police 
officers an hour later. The official media say the “lessons” the ISO was hoping 
to learn from Tunisia and Egypt was how to launch an uprising against the 
regime of president Robert Mugabe. Fortunately the plotters were interrupted 
before they could finalise their plans - or so the official line goes.

The bail application was vehemently opposed by the prosecution, on the grounds 
that the accused all have connections outside the country and may abscond. 
Also, they may continue plotting to overthrow the government - treason, after 
all, is a very serious offence carrying the death penalty - and could interfere 
with witnesses and tamper with evidence. Of course, the authorities, by 
contrast, are meticulous in their upholding of judicial propriety.

Apart from the punitive cash sums demanded as surety (even for a university 
lecturer like comrade Gwisai), the comrades must stay at specified addresses, 
surrender their passports and all travel documents, and report three times a 
week to CID Law and Order in Harare. The prosecution may yet appeal against the 
granting of bail and it could well be a year before any trial begins.

I asked comrade Matica why he thought the state has decided to move against the 
ISO. Affiliated to the Socialist Workers Party’s International Socialist 
Tendency, it is not exactly a huge or influential grouping. It has recently 
appeared to splinter, with at least two small groups breaking away. Since he is 
not a full member, comrade Matica did not feel able to talk about the size or 
health of the ISO, but he told me that “Anything is possible in Zimbabwe”, 
meaning that even a group like the ISO could suddenly become a real threat.

“They want to make an example of the comrades - that’s how it’s being reported 
in the media.” Besides, it is not just the ISO: “There have been a lot of 
arrests. In fact three officials from the Movement for Democratic Change have 
just been arrested for no reason at MDC headquarters.” The MDC, set up in 2000 
by the trade union movement under the leadership of former Zimbabwe Congress of 
Trade Unions president Morgan Tsvangirai, was eventually taken over by an 
alliance of middle class blacks and white farmers, backed by international 
capital. It is now part of a ‘power-sharing’ government of ‘national unity’ 
alongside Mugabe’s Zanu-PF. The former union leader holds no less a post than 
prime minister.

Comrade Matica said: “The last time I heard Tsvangirai speaking at a press 
conference, he was saying it was dubious to arrest someone like Munyaradzi 
Gwisai. He was saying Munyaradzi wouldn’t hurt a fly and shouldn’t be 
detained.” Well, if that is the view of the prime minister ... Clearly all this 
says a lot about the balance of power between Zimbabwe’s two main parties.

Comrade Matica ended our interview with an appeal for solidarity. Support the 
international day of protest on Monday March 21. Send a donation to the bank 
account set up in South Africa to support the prisoners, their families and 
their defence. Go to the website comrade Matica himself has helped launch 
(www.freethemnow.com), sign the online petition and leave a solidarity message. 
“Publicise the case widely to let the Mugabe government know that the arrests 
are unjustified. Zimbabwe claims it is democratic, allows freedom of speech and 
freedom of association, and upholds human rights.”

[email protected] 

Day of protest
Monday March 21, 12 noon: Picket Zimbabwe embassy, 29 The Strand, London WC2.

Donations
Account name: ‘CDL Solidarity Fund’; account number: 100 185 3784; Swift code: 
NEDSZAJJ. Reference: ‘Zimbabwean treason trialists’.
Receiving bank: Nedbank, Killarney branch (code: 191 60535), Johannesburg, 
South Africa.

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