Zimbabwe’s Catholic bishops on Friday condemned an
“unprecedented” government crackdown on dissent against a backdrop of economic
ruin and allegations of rampant rights abuses.
In a rare and unusually strong pastoral letter, the Zimbabwe
Catholic Bishops Conference weighed in on the ongoing crisis, which the
government denies exists.
“Fear runs down the spine of many of our people today. The
crackdown on dissent is unprecedented,” said seven bishops from the country’s
main cities and towns in a letter issued on Friday.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administration has lately
come under heavy criticism over recent its crackdowns on dissent, including
detentions, assaults and intimidation.
“Voices of various governments, the European Union, the
African Union and the UN on the desperate situation in Zimbabwe have not only
confirmed the seriousness of the human rights breaches by government agents but
the need to rally behind #ZimbabweanLivesMatter” the bishops said.
“The struggle in Zimbabwe, has resulted in a multi-layered
crisis of the convergence of economic collapse, deepening poverty, food
insecurity, corruption and human rights abuses among other crisis in urgent
need of resolution,” the bishops said.
They also said “corruption in the country has reached
alarming levels”.
The bishops’ statement comes weeks after authorities banned
protests planned by an opposition politician and deployed the army and riot
police in huge numbers to quell them.
Transform Zimbabwe party leader Jacob Ngarivhume who called
for the July 31 protests against state corruption and worsening economic
troubles, was arrested 12 days ahead of the strike.
Journalist and documentary filmmaker Hopewell Chin’ono was
also detained along with him. They both remain in jail after being denied bail.
More than a dozen protesters, including award-winning author
Tsitsi Dangarembga, were arrested on July 31 and later freed on bail.
The bishops said the call for “demonstrations is an expression
of growing frustration and aggravation caused by conditions that the majority
of Zimbabweans find themselves in.”
They warned that “suppression of people’s anger can only
serve to deepen the crisis and take the nation into deeper crisis”.
Zimbabwe’s economy has been on a downturn for over a decade
with shortages of fuel and basic commodities such as sugar and the staple
cornmeal.
But the government of Mnangagwa, who took over from
long-time ruler Robert Mugabe after a coup in 2017, pledging to weed out
corruption and revive the moribund economy, says there is no crisis in the
country.
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