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RESOLUTION 1325
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ZIMBABWE: VALENTINE'S DAY MARCH
STOPPED
February 16, 2004 (UN IRIN) Police in Zimbabwe on Saturday
dispersed more than 100 women who were planning a Valentine's Day
march to urge national reconciliation in the capital, Harare.
In Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city, the high court refused to hear
an urgent application sought by the Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
to compel the police to allow them to march.
Jenni Williams, spokesperson for WOZA, a pressure group protesting
Zimbabwe's political and economic crisis, said although the police
had initially given them permission to march at various centres
around the country, there was a last-minute verbal withdrawal of
the permission.
"Nobody has been arrested or beaten up, but what has happened
is that our right to stage a peaceful demonstration has been denied,"
said Williams.
The women, who were dressed in red and white, managed to regroup
in other parts of the capital and distributed roses and valentine
cards saying they were defending their "right to be loved and
the rights of our children".
"Defend your right to love and let love overcome hate. Defend
all your rights and stand up for the truth," read part of a
flyer that was being distributed by the women.
In Chitungwiza town, about 35 km outside Harare, the women handed
out roses and cards to bemused policemen and suspects at the police
station without incident.
On St Valentine's day last year, protests against the rising cost
of living resulted in 70 WOZA members - and some journalists covering
the march - being arrested for breaching the Public Order and Security
Act (POSA). An anti-POSA demonstration in July 2003 led to the arrest
of 48 WOZA supporters.
Williams said WOZA's weekend action was taking place against the
backdrop of a deteriorating economy, political violence, corruption,
hunger, and a rise in rape cases - a recent survey suggested that
18 percent of Zimbabwean women had been raped at some point in their
lives.
According to Janah Ncube, head of the Women's Coalition, a grouping
of women's organisations and activists, 137 girls were raped in
Harare in January alone.
"What is really scary about the rape figures is that they were
reported at one clinic in one month. The real picture of rape crimes
could be horrendous if figures of other clinics and those of unreported
crimes were taken into consideration," Ncube was quoted as
saying.
More details: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=39300
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200402160082.html
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