Anxiety grows for Zimbabwe’s kidnapped activist


Harare activist -Tonderai Ndira.

Harare – Concern is growing about the fate of one of Zimbabwe’s best-known

activists, arrested more times than any other, was kidnapped from his home

six days ago. Tonderai Ndira is 33, married with a couple of children, and

lives in the heart of one of Zimbabwe’s most politically volatile urban

slums, Mabvuku, on the eastern edge of Harare. Last Wednesday men in plain

clothes, driving a white four-by-four pick-up truck went to his house and

allegedly beat Ndira in front of Raphael and Linette, his two children, and

then took him away. Nothing hs been heard from him since then. Four other

Harare activists who were kidnapped in the same period have since been

released and are back at home. From the time the opposition Movement for

Democratic Change was formed in September 1999, Ndira has been active in the

streets and in urban structures and in every pro-democracy campaign. At last

count, his family and friends believe he has been arrested at least 35

times, certainly a record in Zimbabwe’s political history. Last year he

spent five months in detention. He has never been to trial in connection

with any of his arrests because police have not presented evidence of a

crime. He has regularly been assaulted by alleged Zanu PF members or the

security forces during political violence and was hospitalized with serious

injuries in 2003. Although he is in robust health normally, like other

former detainees he has bouts of frail health when he is released from

police custody.

A Harare judge recently described conditions in Harare’s police cells as

unfit for human occupation. Security Minister Didymus Mutasa and Zimbabwe

police and army officials have not responded to question’s about Ndira’s

disappearance. The MDC says that more than 30 of its supporters and

activists have been killed since Zimbabwe’s March 29 election. Several

retired South African generals, who returned last week after investigating

the violence in Zimbabwe, say they have informed South African president

Thabo Mbeki that they have been shocked at the violence they have

investigated. President Mugabe has denounced the political violence, but

says Zanu PF could never be involved in violence against its people. He

blames the MDC. But most observers say the mounting violence and

intimidation, mainly targeting opposition supporters, make it virtually

impossible for a planned June 27 presidential runoff to be credible. In the

March 29 polling the MDC defeated Zanu PF in parliamentary elections. MDC

president Morgan Tsvangirai beat Mr. Mugabe in the presidential vote count,

but official results say he did not win a 50 percent majority so there will

be a second round on June 27. Meanwhile, Mr. Tsvangirai postponed his return

to Zimbabwe from South Africa due to assassination fears. It is unclear when

he would return to campaign for the presidential run-off.

VOA

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