Sky reports on a beating during the crackdown
Zimbabwe: Daylight beatings instil public fear in 'lawless' country
Sky News By John Sparks, Africa correspondent
Monday 28 January 2019
Security officials beat man in Zimbabwe (Warning - contains images of violence)
https://news.sky.com/story/zimbabwe-daylight-beatings-instil-public-fear-in-lawless-country-11619470
TRANSCRIPT FOLLOWS
We caught a glimpse of the "new Zimbabwe" as we were heading towards Harare's southern suburbs for an interview.
As our vehicle slowed for the light on a four-lane stretch of the Chiremba Road, I caught a glimpse of a black truncheon being whipped through the air.
It belonged to a policeman and he was striking someone lying on the ground.
Every time the man tried to get up, the policemen hit him on the head.
There were two other people in attendance, assisting the policeman with the beating.
A policeman set upon the handcuffed man as he lay on the ground
People took to the streets in collective rage, after the government hiked fuel prices by 150%
A soldier in camouflage with a machine gun and a plain clothes security agent pitched in, slapping, punching and kicking the victim.
Stunned by what I was seeing, I asked our driver to stop and got out of the car.
I joined a group of people at an outdoor garden centre who were watching from the other side of the road.
A women in an orange T-shirt trembled as she spoke. "What is happening to Zimbabwe?" she said. "Even in (former president) Mugabe's time we didn't witness such things."
A middle-aged man told me he was frightened. He said: "Who is in charge? Is this a military state?"
Children held as 'enemies of the state' in Zimbabwe
More than 650 people have been arrested and detained over the past two weeks and hundreds more beaten as the police and military sweep through towns and cities throughout Zimbabwe.
The crackdown was launched after street protests and looting broke out last week.
People took to the streets in collective rage, after the government raised fuel prices by 150%.
The country's president Emmerson Mnangagwa, nicknamed The Crocodile, said the price hike was necessary to tackle shortages caused by an increase in fuel use and "rampant" illegal trading.
But the reality is that the government is broke and can no longer afford to purchase basic commodities under its dysfunctional, command-and-control economy.
But Mnangagwa and his fellow cadres are still in charge and they have given members of the security services free rein to reassert control.
Emmerson Mnangagwa's regime is broke and cannot afford to buy basic commodities
Back on Harare's Chiremba Road, we watched as members of the police and military force-marched their captive, then ordered him to run.
The man in grey was bundled into a private taxi van, then dragged out by a policeman as our camera captured the scene. Several policemen set upon him as he sat handcuffed on the ground.
A man in a blue police uniform delivered a series of blows with all his strength. The victim looks bewildered as his attacker tries to hold his head up.
A little later another man in handcuffs is pulled from the van and ordered to drive.
Policemen and plain-clothes agents then hopped into the back.
We do not know why a prisoner was told to drive, but it seems this private vehicle had been commandeered by the authorities as they swept through the neighbourhood.
The consequences of such attacks, undertaken in broad daylight, are clear. Zimbabweans feel scared and incredibly vulnerable.
The security crackdown has left Zimbabweans feeling scared and vulnerable
Beatrice Mtetwa, one of the country's best known human rights lawyers, says something terrible has happened over the last few weeks.
"All of these things add up to a very clear, orchestrated, subversion of suspects' rights," she said.
"Where does rule of law stand right now?" I asked.
"Right now, in the past two weeks the rule of law has been trampled on so badly that it is not there," she said. "It doesn't exist."
https://news.sky.com/story/zimbabwe-daylight-beatings-instil-public-fear-in-lawless-country-11619470
Further reading:
Arrest made after Zimbabwe's Emmerson Mnangagwa 'appalled' by beatings in Sky News report
Zimbabwe crackdown: Children shackled and caged in security round-up
Troops return to Zimbabwe's streets with a vengeance
Zimbabwe leader Emmerson Mnangagwa: 'Heads will roll' after brutal crackdown on protesters
Crackdown on Zimbabwe protesters 'a taste of things to come' as president cuts short trip abroad
Robert Mugabe: Ousted president unable to walk as health declines