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Saturday, 31 October 2020
Friday, 30 October 2020
ROHR Zimbabwe North Branch Zoom Meeting Saturday 17 October 2020 Report
Apologies: Farai Nhakaniso (Chairperson - North Branch), Karen Nhakaniso (Secretary - North Branch)
To view pictures taken at the event, follow the link below; -
https://www.flickr.com/photos/rohr_zimbabwe__manchester/albums/72157716508920422
By: Information & Publicity Department
Thursday, 29 October 2020
ROHR ZIMBABWE MAKES ANOTHER DONATION OF GROCERIES TOWARDS EPWORTH KIDS BREAKFAST INITIATIVE –21st OCTOBER 2020
These funds purchased, upon request; 5x cases of Sugar(100kgs),
3x boxes of Cooking oil (72Litres), 7 x Cases of Peanut Butter (375g x 84
bottles), 1 x pack Sunlight (750ml x 6)
ROHR Zimbabwe pledges to continue supporting and
complimenting Caroline Bushu and Sandra Chikwama the two strong women who are the brains behind the Breakfast Kitchen
initiative.
On a daily basis, they are currently using around 140kgs of mealie meal broken down as follows; -Around 40 kg in the morning, about 60 kg in the afternoon and 40 kg in the evening.
ROHR Zimbabwe Human Rights Violations (HRV) Monitoring Committee Zoom meeting of Sunday 25th October 2020 - Report
The meeting started at 18:00 hrs
Attendance: - Lilian Nleya, Nicolate Gwati, Alvina Chibhamu, Karen Nhakaniso, Vongayi Mufara, Vengai Mutsawu, Delina Mutyambizi
Nicolate Gwati chaired the meeting. She opened by welcoming everyone and commended everyone for their punctuality. We had all been paired up and mandated to research human violations in Zimbabwe. She started by suggesting if each pair could give at least 3 incidents of Human rights violations in their allocated period.
Vongayi Mufara
and Alvina Chibhamu – They gave the feedback that the
period leading to 31st July 2020 was
volatile due to the planned protests and Covid-19 rules.
¾
Reported a host of Human rights violations
including arrests, unlawful detention and arrests, denied bails, delayed bail
outs, tortures (including the cases of Hopewell Chin’ono, Jacob Ngarivhume,
Obert Masaraure etc)
¾
Three MDC members arrested protesting
and charged (Ostensibly for Covid-19 Law transgressions).
¾ Constitutional amendments that would have eroded the freedom in the Judiciary system.
Karen Nhakaniso and Vengai Mutsawu -
Reported a few incidents between 11th August 2020 and 31st
August 2020. They are;-
¾
Job Sikhala was arrested and denied
bail.
¾
MDC Alliance members arrested on 24th
August when they went to Court in solidarity with Job Sikhala.
¾ 15 Villagers who were vendors and who attended an MDC alliance rally were arrested in Murehwa and for disrupting free flow of traffic (Ostensibly for Covid-19 Law transgressions).
Lilian Nleya and Shingirayi Kandi – reported the following incidents; -
¾
Nhamo Five was arrested on 18th
of September ostensibly for insulting the President of Zimbabwe. He had
complained about the $12 transport fare from Chitungwiza to Harare CBD being exorbitant.
He had cited the mismanagement of the economy by Zanu-PF led government in general and President Emmerson Mnangagwa
in particular as the main cause of the price hikes.
¾
3 Harare residence were unlawfully
detained and remanded in custody for solidarity protest and for following MDC
Alliance MP for Zengeza West Job Sikhala.
¾ Takudzwa Ngadziore (22), ZINASU President was arrested for protesting at Impala car rental following the use of their cars in cases of abductions of citizens by state agencies.
Nicolate Gwati and Nontokozo Malaba Ncube reported as follows; -
¾
Simasimpe Reeds Tshuma (25), a member
of the Zimbabwe People Power Movement (ZPPM) was arrested and charged, allegedly
for undermining the State after he was found in Dete asking residents to sign a petition calling for international intervention in the Zimbabwean crisis.
¾
Agnes Gurunhe (35) of Mucheke who is
living with albinism was barred entry into the Pick n Pay Supermarket in
Masvingo after she allegedly asked to wash her hands with soap instead of
sanitizers that affect her skin.
¾ Hopely Residence in the south of Harare have been reduced to digging up wells near the Granville Graveyard so as to get drinking water.
Nicolate Gwati observed that citizens of other African countries (e.g. Nigeria and Ghana) have hyped up condemnation of human rights violations in their countries through sustained peaceful demonstrations. Youths from the Nigeria and Ghana have been in contact on Twitter to discuss the way forward regarding these violations. We can also get them and activists from other African countries to support our #ZimbabweanLivesMatter campaign and Human Rights Violations Dossier.
Delina Mutyambizi agreed that it was a good idea to collaborate with human rights organizations from other countries. She went on to suggest that ROHR Zimbabwe issues a statement regarding the #ENDSARS Campaign in support of the Nigerian Citizens against Human Rights Violations in Nigeria.
Alvina Chibhamu concurred with the idea to collaborate with human rights activists from other African countries in campaigns against human rights violations. She also gave feedback on the Scotland #ENDSARS campaign event which ROHR Scotland Branch members went to support.
Lilian Nleya suggested a sustained a daily routine of monitoring and recording of Human Rights violations in Zimbabwe so that we avoid a backlog?
Nikki- Suggested if we can have rotations with the current pairs in monitoring daily Human Rights Violations e.g. Lilian and Shingi records for December and the following month the next pair monitors HRV for that month.
Alvina suggested that if this can be done at an organizational level so that the workload can be shared. Each member will keep a tab of the violations and report on the monthly meetings.
Delina drew
the committee’s attention to the case of
Tapiwa Makore, the Murehwa 7-year-old boy who was murdered and dismembered for
ritual purposes, allegedly by his uncle and their herd boy employee. She noted interesting
feedback from members in Zimbabwe. She pointed out the possibility of this murder
having been politically motivated as it is reportedly believed that Tapiwa
Makore’s father is an MDC Alliance chairperson or executive in the area. She urged
ROHR Zimbabwe to continue supporting the #JusticeForTapiwaMakore campaign, kick-started by ROHR Scotland branch.
She suggested we engage popular social media platforms e.g. Tilda Live, Sis Melly, Vuka Zimbabwe etc to have a video campaign featured on these platforms to highlight the Human Rights Abuses in Zimbabwe.
Further Action
Points
¾
All research findings to be typed up
and emailed to Nicolate by Wednesday 28th
October 2020.
¾
Next meeting is scheduled for
01/11/2020 @6pm
¾ Information& Publicity Department to liaise with different social media platforms regarding #JusticeForTapiwaMakore Campaign.
Nicolate declared the meeting closed at 1900hrs
after all agenda items were exhausted.
Tuesday, 20 October 2020
ROHR UK Chapter Branch Chairs & Secretaries Zoom meeting – Sunday 11.10.2020 Report
· Olivia Chamboko cited problems with members not
doing their duties, excuses being no experience sometimes, or short notice. She
noted that some people seem to just want to collect information without participating
and it is weighing heavily on the few members that had to carry the burden of
making things work. She had raised the matter with the Board of Trustees and
had been advised to remove any non-committed member from the Branch Committee
provided she followed due process and that the Branch Executive Committee has
passed a resolution to remove such members. Olivia stated that the Scotland
Branch Executive Committee had held a meeting yesterday, 10th October
2020 and had resolved, among other things, to give non-committed members a
month’s notice to either pull up their
socks or be risk being stripped of their portfolios.
· Alvina Chibhamu stated that they had raised this
matter recurrently and that they had now reached the end of their tethers, hence
the notice to non-committed members. Only a few people seemed to toil for the
branch. The others seemed content with just piggybacking on the few despite
everyone knowing what their role entails. Even when they have been fed with
ideas, deadlines are still missed and they have to be chased up.
What has been working?
· Alvina, Vongayi and Olivia are doing all the work and carrying the branch and this has become too taxing.
· Delina commented this has been a long-standing
attitude since she came on board in 2009. Sadly, the commitment we rely on is
from a handful of willing members. This attitude extends to the wider Zimbabwe
populace, Journalist Hopewell Chin’ono for instance complained that people literally
wage a war, commenting only on social media about issues but not acted on the
information.
· Mr Nedie pointed out that turnout was high and huge
when ROHR started as most people did not have documentation. However, the ‘2020
challenge’, stemmed from a “forensic interpretation” of the future of ROHR he
did in 2009,where membership was predicted to dwindle and then revamped, which
is where we are now.
·
Mr Nedie commended the Scotland branch for the work
it is doing, together with other members who are still focused.
We are perceived as an Asylum-seeking
organisation and as such we struggle to attract membership from people with
some form of right to remain.
§ We need to address attitudinal challenges. We could start by engaging all Zimbabweans, especially old members, including British citizens as well as those without status. Mr Nedie bemoaned the apathy in the Zimbabwean diaspora in general when it came to standing up for human rights. He said that we need to take a leaf from west Africans who always unite for a common cause.
§ On that note, Nikki cited the #EndSARSmovement in Nigeria where its
government is buckling due to mounted pressure from the whole country, they
managed to rope in the international community through social media.
§ The Covid-19 pandemic issue has taken us backwards as there is no face
to face contact. In some branches, members may have been demotivated by not
seeing ROHR longstanding members, mostly board members coming to in support their
branch meetings. Current restrictions have meant the non-appearance of familiar
faces/ ROHR members in these branches.
§ We need ROHR foot soldiers on the ground in Zimbabwe-wearing ROHR
t-shirts, being seen on television, radio, and social media to put ROHR on the
map
§ Zimbabweans are not united, we need to change that narrative and have
every member change the way we are seen in their own circles, in and outside of
ROHR.
§ Delina commended Scotland and Midlands branches for their contributions
towards the visibility of ROHR as a human rights organisation. Scotland Branch’s
fundraising efforts in support of the Epworth kitchen in Zimbabwe through
reaching out to the communities outside of Zimbabweans to solicit funds is
commendable. We need to be aware of what
is happening around and continue to support initiatives that foster a change in
attitude towards human rights and welfare issues of the Zimbabwean populace
thereby enhancing the image of ROHR Zimbabwe as a human rights organization.
§ Alvina added that the Scotland Branch discussed Black History Month, in
particular, the relevance of countless unsung heroes in Zimbabwe. She also
suggested we market ROHR Zimbabwe beyond Zimbabwean circles and hope to collaborate
with like-minded international human rights organizations.
§ Alvina suggested to take advantage of the pandemic situation and hold a
National zoom meeting
§ Some members give the excuse of lack of training. Mr Nedie offered to
mentor anyone who felt they needed help in performing their role.
§ Nicolate said we need to find a way of speaking to members. Take it to
task to start calling members to try and re-engage them and map ways forward.
Survey underway from the Executive Committee to try and bring people back to
the fold from all the issues being raised by members
§ Delina spoke on the area of educating members as some do not understand
their rights etc. Campaigns such as #MeetYourMP helped raise awareness. When
approached, MPs are usually keen to know learn more about the human rights
situation in Zimbabwe and tend to be very cooperative. A good example is when
Alvina’s MP came to a Scotland Branch meeting to discuss the situation in
Zimbabwe. This followed the meeting Alvina had with the MP. We need to keep on
knocking on doors and keep making noise as ROHR. We should be nonpartisan so
that we are in good position to challenge any office if they are in breach of
human rights.
§ Mr Nedie suggested organising capacity building- education exercise
about what it means to be a Human Rights Activists and all the questions
surrounding, retraining of members, motivation, and other workshops for members.
(Olivia asked if we could have the trainings on meetings)
AOB
Sunday, 18 October 2020
ROHR North Branch Executive Committee Teleconference Meeting - 10.10.2020
Agenda:
The meeting was agreed for Saturday 17
October 2020. All on the call agreed on a start time of 14:00hrs. Vice-Chair
Vengai Mutsawu and Chairman Farai Nhakaniso were tasked with finding out if
ROHR has a Zoom account that has unlimited minutes for meetings.
2. Campaigns
N/A
ROHR Zimbabwe Scotland Branch Zoom Meeting - 10.10.2020 - Report
Agenda
· Alvina opened by explaining that Black History Month(UK) runs
throughout October to recognize, celebrate and champion the history of
achievements of people of African descent, informing and educating on black
heritage, value systems and way of life of British society that make black
lives matter. She also mentioned that this year the theme is Advancing Justice
and Equality in Scotland. She called upon attendees to share their
understanding of the black History months.
· Vongayi
mentioned that to her it’s not only about remembering the bad things that
happened to black people but to celebrate contributions from icon Civil Rights
Activist like Martin Luther King who always encouraged people to stand for what
is right. She encouraged people to participate in speaking out against Human
rights violations in Zimbabwe and went on to mention one of Martin Luther’s quotes
“ He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to
perpetuate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really
cooperating with it”
· Karen
mentioned that she is inspired by Steve Biko who was an anti-apartheid activist
and was on the forefront of a grassroots anti-apartheid campaign known as the
Black Consciousness Movement and died for a good cause. He was assassinated for
his activism activities in 1977
·
Harriet talked
about Nelson Mandela- South African anti-apartheid revolutionary and political
leader who later served as President of South Africa.
·
Olivia
recognised all ROHR Zimbabwe Activists who have been fighting for Human rights
in Zimbabwe from the time the organisation started to date. She highlighted why
Scotland branch members were in prison jerseys; as an extension to the campaign
we did last month #UnlawfulIncarcerationMustEnd, we were also hailing activists
on the ground taking a stand on this.
·
Nicolate
mentioned Harriet Tubman an American political Activist who was born into
slavery and she escaped. She went on 13 missions to rescue approximately 70
enslaved people using the network of antislavery activists and safe houses
known as the underground railroad.
·
Vengayi advised
that he was touched by PM Boris Johnson’s Black History month speech when he
encouraged black people and everyone to keep up the fight against inequality
and racism.
·
Tabeth
mentioned that it is good to recognise our own Zimbabwean Activists who are
contributing towards the black History. She pointed out Beatrice Mtetwa who is
doing a lot in fighting for justice in Zimbabwe.
·
Olivia suggested we come up with a campaign to
celebrate and recognize our activists in Zimbabwe.
·
Karen suggested that we come up with short videos
recordings with a speech about Activists who inspire us.
·
Tabeth supported that videos are more effective and
powerful than writing as most people do not read anymore.
·
Vongayi suggested that everyone could come up with
a short statement of their chosen activist; giving a summary and history about
why the Activist inspires them to go across all our social media platforms and
ROHR blog.
· Delina suggested that we could write a letter directed to the government and post it on social media tagging people like Nick Mangwana who engages people on social media.
Harriet asked when the donation was going to be done and Alvina responded that it was going to be as soon as our representatives on the ground avail themselves.
By: Information &
Publicity Department