Return the favour to Beatrice
Dear Family and Friends,
Large red hearts had been tied to some lamp posts along the main highway through my home town five days after the country voted in a referendum. Made of kaylite the red hearts with white lettering proclaimed: "VIVA ZANU PF," and with those words we know for sure that open season has begun.
Hardly had we finished voting in the no-contest, constitutional referendum last week when one of the bravest of the brave was arrested. Going to the MDC communications office on behalf of her clients who were being arrested, human rights lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa was herself detained by police. With foreign journalists from many countries here to cover the referendum, it didn't take long for Beatrice Mtetwa's arrest to make international news and become common knowledge at home.
Surely this was a mistake, a mis-understanding people thought; this is the courageous, internationally acclaimed lawyer and defender of human rights who has fought in the courts for journalists, political victims, members of WOZA and other NGO's. An MDC press statement said that Beatrice Mtetwa had been arrested for: "daring to ask why her client had been arrested." Later we heard that the human rights lawyer was to be charged with 'obstructing or defeating the course justice'.
The irony of the timing of Mtetwa's arrest left everyone dumbfounded. Her lawyer said: "Her arrest is not just an attack on her profession but on the people of Zimbabwe who have just voted yes to a new constitution that enshrines fundamental human rights." On the same day that Mr Mugabe and his wife were meeting and being bowed to by the new Pope Francis in the Vatican, Beatrice Mtetwa was appearing in the dock at the Harare Magistrates Court.