Monday, July 25, 2011

"Jambanja " in Parliament ......as MP is dragged by the necktie and journalist is head butted by female mobster !!!!

HARARE - President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu PF supporters stormed Parliament in
Harare yesterday, beating MPs and journalists while women traders were
rounded up in Mbare and forced to attend their party meeting, as the
political situation in the country deteriorates further.


The Zanu PF mob caused mayhem inside parliament, forcing the cancellation of
business.



The violent scenes at parliament and in Mbare are the latest in a string of
violent events that have spread as far as Mutare, Chinhoyi and Masvingo,
where Zanu PF supporters forced parliamentary committees from carrying out
public hearings on human rights issues.

Human rights groups, churches and political parties have also reported a
spike in cases of politically motivated violence by Zanu PF and state
security agents since Mugabe started hyping talk of imminent elections.

Yesterday’s scenes at parliament, where an MP was dragged by the necktie
while receiving heavy punches and kicks, as journalists were forced to run
for dear life after one of them was head butted by a female Zanu PF mobster,
highlighted the chaos.

MPs and journalists including those from the Daily News on Sunday had to
seek police protection as hundreds of violent Zanu PF crowds forced the
Joint Committee of the House of Assembly Portfolio Committee on Justice,
Legal Affairs, Constitutional and Parliamentary Affairs and the Senate
Thematic Committee on Human Rights to abandon a public hearing on human
rights issues.

Visibly drunk, and in a clearly planned pattern, the mob beat up people in
front of the police, who did not arrest anyone.

Trouble started when the public who were in the parliament building to give
evidence to the committee finished singing the national anthem.

The mobsters went for MDC MP for Hwange Central Brian Tshuma whom they
accused of not singing the national anthem.
Similar accusations were levelled against the Standard reporter Nqaba
Matshazi.

The Zanu PF mob shouted abusive and unprintable words to the MP, calling him
a “sell-out” who could not sing the national anthem.

Outside parliament, they formed a barricade as they pushed and shoved,
blocking the public from attending the hearing.

Several MPs were stranded at the door with the youths blocking the entrance.
Among the MPs who were blocked were Misheck Shoko, Monica Mutsvangwa and
Cephas Makuyana.

The Daily News on Sunday witnessed the pandemonium as the atmosphere turned
tense outside parliament. The Zanu PF gangsters threatened anyone they
suspected of being an MDC supporter.

Some of the Zanu PF rabble-rousers who managed to force their way into
parliament heckled members of the public who were in the chambers and
disrupted proceedings, which were just about to begin.

Attention turned to Tshuma and Matshazi who were punched for their “offence”.

The rowdy crowd held Tshuma by the necktie, dragged him out of parliament
building before assaulting him.
Matshazi later fled.

Another journalist Levi Mukarati, from the Financial Gazette, was
head-butted by a vicious female mobster before he sought police protection.

Police had to protect journalists as the mob bayed for the blood of anyone
they identified as a journalist.

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), one of the organisations that had
intended to give a presentation to the committee, said Mukarati sustained
bruises from the assault while Tshuma lost one of his mobile phones and
cash.

Singing Mugabe praise songs, the mobsters outside parliament demanded that
they be let in the building before forcing themselves in to demand that
official proceedings should not be allowed to start.

Committee chairman Misheck Marava’s pleas for peace fell on deaf ears and
were forced to abort the hearing as the youths demanded that he address the
public in vernacular languages instead of English.

Some people passing through the parliament building were caught in the
crossfire. A white man who was passing by was physically attacked and
rescued by police from further assault as the mobsters turned racist.

Police finally managed to restore order and drove everyone away from
parliament. Journalists and MPs had to wait for the youths to disperse
before they were allowed to leave.

The Zimbabwe Union of Journalists said it was “irritated” by Zanu PF’s
behaviour.

“We note with alarm the escalation in terms of harassment and abuses of
journalists as we inch towards referendum and elections,” said Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists secretary-general Foster Dongozi.

“Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights unreservedly condemned the conduct of the
rowdy mob, the disruptions of the public hearing, not only in Harare, but in
Chinhoyi and Mutare, and the assaults on a legislator and journalists,” said
ZLHR.

“These disruptions, which constitute contempt of parliament in terms of the
law, are criminal offences. As such, these actions must be immediately
investigated by parliamentarians and the Zimbabwe Republic Police, and the
culprits — including the invisible masterminds behind the disruptions —
identified in order to bring them to book,” the group said.

Rowdy Zanu PF mobs also disrupted the committee’s meetings in Chinhoyi,
Masvingo and Mutare in past weeks.

In Mbare’s Mupedzanhamo market, it was an all-male affair after Zanu PF
mobsters rounded up all female vendors and force-marched them to Number 4
Grounds near the Mbare flats for a Zanu PF Women’s League meeting.

When the Daily News on Sunday visited the market, there were no women in
sight, even the tough ones that sell skin creams and carrier bags.

Men inside the market said the women were scooped from the market early for
the meeting. One male trader who only identified himself as Tindo said: “The
market usually opens around 6 am and by 9 am the women had all been force
marched to attend the women’s league meeting.

It is now such an inconvenience to us because we have to work double while
they are at the meeting,” he said.

Mupedzanhamo is one of the country’s busiest and largest markets that mostly
trades cheap second-hand clothes mainly smuggled from Mozambique.

At the grounds where the meeting was taking place, all possible entry points

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