Dear Family and Friends,
Almost two months ago Bulawayo made international news when city authorities asked residents to engage in synchronized toilet flushing at 7.30 pm every third day. Jokes came from all directions but as most of us have endured years of water shortages in towns all over the country, there wasn't much to laugh about. Precious water stored in buckets, plugs left in, toilets not flushed and ‘splash' baths with a few jugs of water are all very familiar so we sent sympathetic messages to our friends in Bulawayo. Things came to a head after repeated meetings with council officials yielded nothing. Over 800 WOZA members sent delegations to local council officers to complain about prolonged water cuts but still they were fobbed off and so they embarked on three days of protests.
On the 12th of November seventy nine WOZA members and two babies were arrested and taken to Bulawayo Central police station for staging a peaceful protest at the City Council Tower block. Later that day they were released. The next day WOZA tried to protest again. At midday as protesters arrived at the government complex in Bulawayo, riot police arrived and arrested eleven WOZA members, taking them across the road and putting them under guard in the Drill Hall. Police then went to another central intersection where protesters were gathering and according to the WOZA press statement the ‘police officers disembarked to beat members who were marching towards the complex.'
Another eleven people were arrested and WOZA said police shouted obscenities at the women and called them prostitutes. One police officer who said he didn't care if the protesters knew his name, told the women: 'this country was liberated by blood and only those who spilt blood can be the ones to talk.' This second group of eleven protesters were taken to Bulawayo Central police station but as they were disembarking the Chief Inspector arrived and told the riot police to take the women back to where they'd come from. That didn't happen, instead the women were driven out of town and dumped at a cemetery on the Victoria Falls road.
On the third day WOZA tried again. This time 150 of their members managed to get to the steps of the Mayor's office at City Hall.
There they were met, not by the Mayor but by senior police officers who blocked their progress and the WOZA protesters had to disperse.