The January 1998 three-day food riots which were in response to the general increase in prices of basic food commodities and collapse of the Zimbabwean dollar fuelled by excessive payout packages to war veterans and the country’s military assistance to the Democratic Republic of Congo followed and represented the most violent riots Zimbabwe had witnessed since independence. It was not just the rioting of ordinary citizens, but the violence of the State’s response that particularly shocked the nation. Eight extra-judicial killings, scores of grave injuries and thousands of arrests left an enduring impression on the nation. The 2000 elections arrived against the backdrop of not just a long contested process of producing a new constitution but, tellingly, against violent land invasions and cases of organised violence and torture on commercial farms which, according to research think-tank, the Research and Advocacy Unit, was aimed at converting the support of over 300 000 commercial farm workers and their families to Zanu PF. The Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum (the Forum) and the Amani Trust produced multiple reports documenting the scale of the organised violence and torture during this period: 80 extrajudicial killings; more than 799 cases of abductions and more than 90 cases of torture were recorded. The 2002 presidential elections were characterised by the formation of the National Youth Service (NYS) under the late Zanu PF political commissar Border Gezi. Although the purpose of the National Youth Service was for provision of education and skills to young people, the program was soon politicised with young people taught on intolerance manuals to penetrate violence on political opponents. The youth, who came to be commonly referred to as “Green Bombers” or “maBorder Gezi” were repeatedly implicated by the public and press in murder, torture, beatings, rape, abductions, malicious damage to property, theft and intimidation. January 2023 The Zimbabwe Peace Project Monthly Monitoring Report 14

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