Zimbabwe in Lockdown: COVID-19 & Human Rights from a community perspective 96.6% Perpetrators are Police Army Municipal Police So, it is on this basis of government’s inability to provide adequate healthcare, and the social vulnerability brought about by the lockdown, as well as the shortages of mealie meal that the human rights agenda of the month of April is formed. Central to this is the State’s reactive methods in dealing with the COVID19 crisis, the shortages, and the apparent heavyhandedness of the security forces deployed to deal with the lockdown, and the resurgence of food and other aid discrimination. The State’s aggressive and indiscriminate response to citizens attempting to access scarce basic commodities, mainly mealie-meal and water can help explain why the political affiliation of 99.3 percent of the victims of harassment and assault is neither Zanu PF, MDC or any political party. It also explains the random and the trigger-happy nature of the state security agents, as they, without any consideration for human decency and dignity, beat up and harassed people in the name of enforcing the lockdown. This is further substantiated by the fact that of all the perpetrators, 96.64 percent are the combination of the Zimbabwe Republic Police, the Municipal Police, and the Zimbabwe National Army, and these are the institutions that have been on the frontline of enforcing the lockdown. More evidence of the State security’s capacity to violate human rights is elaborated in the nature of violations, as harassment/ intimidation and assault top the list at 130 and 86 respectively. It took a High Court order issued on 14 April to remind the police and the army that their mandate was not to beat up citizens. Following an application by Lucia Masvondo of Karoi, represented by the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), the High Court barred the police from beating up people and subjecting them to inhumane treatment when enforcing lockdown measures. The order came at a time when there was an upsurge in reports of military and police brutality against civilians accused of ignoring the stay-athome order across the country. Masvondo had been assaulted by security forces and bitten by dogs as she cooked on an open fire outside her house in the evening. These cases were widespread, and even though armed with the High Court order, citizens REPORT HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS TO +263 77 488 3406 +263 77 488 3417 continued to be harassed, intimidated and assaulted by State Security forces. One example is in Mutoko, where police and army officers assaulted and intimidated villagers whom they accused of failing to adhere to the national lockdown regulations. Villagers were treated in inhuman and degrading manner as they were forced to roll or chant revolutionary songs when they were found at shopping centres. In another case that was reported in Marondera, residents who were caught at shopping centres were told to slap each other. Subjecting citizens to such degrading treatment is not consistent with state security agents’ mandate to conduct themselves in a professional manner in accordance with the Constitution.

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