Day of action for Zimbabwe socialists
Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe is continuing a crackdown on all dissent, and among the recent victims are six socialists who could face the death penalty for the "crime of holding a meeting to watch news coverage of the revolutions in North Africa.
Forty-five people were arrested in the raid on the meeting, which was called by Munyaradzi Gwisai, a lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe's law school, general coordinator of the International Socialist Organization (ISO) of Zimbabwe, and a former member of Zimbabwe's parliament. After days in prison, during which some of the detainees were tortured and all were subjected to harsh treatment, most of the arrested were released--but six people remained behind bars on charges of treason.
As this statement was being published, we learned that the six had been granted bail, though at a cost of U.S.$2,000 each, which is an enormous sum in Zimbabwe. According to reports, the six have been released.
SIX PEOPLE in Zimbabwe are now imprisoned on charges of treason for organizing a meeting to discuss the mass movements in Tunisia and Egypt. For this "crime," they face a possible death sentence. They have been tortured and are now in solitary confinement.
An international day of action to demand their release will be held on Monday, March 21, when they are scheduled for a court hearing.
Our message is simple and urgent: We demand that the government of Zimbabwe drop all charges and release them immediately.
Plans are underway for demonstrations in a number of countries. We urge concerned people everywhere to join us in organizing meetings and demonstrations in solidarity with the prisoners. Please translate and distribute this appeal as widely as possible. Let us know know what you are doing at the contact addresses below.
The worldwide significance of the struggle to free the Zimbabwean prisoners is reflected in a recent statement of support from the Congress of South African Trade Unions: "The Egyptian and Tunisian experience have inspired many workers and poor people all over the world to stand up and demand an end to dictatorship, corruption and injustice of whatever kind."
The arrest and prosecution of the six may seem like only the latest round of repression by Robert Mugabe's government against opponents. But it is also an attack on the spirit of Tahrir Square, which has inspired people all over the world. The six prisoners include trade unionists, intellectuals and activists in the struggle for women's rights. The effort to suppress them--and even to kill them, whether by execution or through torture and denial of medical treatment while in custody--is a vicious assault on all of us.
South Africa endorsers:
Anti-Privatisation Forum
Amnesty International
CIVICUS
Democratic Left Front
Freedom of Expression Institute
Lawyers for Human Rights
MDC Johannesburg Youth Assembly
South African Municipal Workers Union
Zimbabwe Treason Trialists Solidarity Committee
U.S. endorsers:
Africa Action
Campaign for Peace and Democracy
Campaign to End the Death Penalty
The Dorothy Day Catholic Worker House (Washington, DC)
Edge of Sports
International Socialist Review
The Nation
New Politics
The Progressive
Socialist Worker
Washington Peace Center