American Renaissance
Previous Story       Next Story       View Comments       Send This Page       Date Archives       Category Archives

Zimbabwe Prisoners in ‘Hell on Earth’ Die From Disease and Hunger

More news stories on Zimbabwe

Jonathan Clayton, The Zimbabewean (UK), April 1, 2009

A horrifying investigative film, shot undercover in Zimbabwe, has exposed how prisons under President Mugabe have become death camps for thousands of inmates who are deprived of food and medical care.

The documentary, shown last night on South Africa’s state broadcaster SABC, documented the “living hell” for prisoners across 55 state institutions. The result, Hell Hole, was a grim account of a crisis in which dozens of inmates die each day.

Describing the conditions in two of the main prisons in the capital, Harare, in late 2008, a prison officer said: “We have gone the whole year in which—for prisoners and prison officers—the food is hand-to-mouth. They’ll be lucky to get one meal. Sometimes they will sleep without. We have moving skeletons, moving graves. They’re dying.”

The film was made by SABC’s Special Assignment programme and shot over three months with cameras smuggled into the prisons. Reaction in South Africa, where the authorities try to deny the extent of the crisis in its neighbour, is certain to be fierce.

The film showed how prison staff have converted cells and storage rooms to “hospital wards” for the dying and makeshift mortuaries, where bodies “rotted on the floor with maggots moving all around”. They have had to create mass graves within prison grounds to accommodate the dead. In many prisons the dead took over whole cells and competed for space with the living. Prisoners described how the sick and the healthy slept side by side, packed together like sardines, along with those who died in the night.

Prisoners in the film are suffering from slow starvation, nutrition-related illnesses and an array of other diseases to which they are exposed as a result of living in unhygienic conditions.

A former prisoner, a young man, struggled to convey the horror of these conditions: “That place, I haven’t got the words . . . I can describe it as hell on earth—though they say it’s more than hell.” In October last year the Zimbabwe Association for Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation of the Offender (Zacro) released a report noting that there were 55 prisons in Zimbabwe, with the capacity to hold 17,000 inmates. But in October 2008 it was estimated that more than 35,000 people were in jail.

A report released to accompany the film said that, unlike Zimbabweans on the outside, “inmates can’t beg for food from passers-by, they can’t forage for wild berries in the bush, and they can’t rummage through dustbins for waste food.

“Because of this, Zimbabwe’s prisons constitute a unique and especially cruel form of torture,” said the report compiled by a human rights organisation called Sokwanele, or “Enough is Enough”. The number of deaths from disease in the prisons have risen since the start of the economic decline and political crisis that has gripped the country since the late 1990s.

From 1998 to 2000 the Zimbabwe Prison Service estimated that there were some 300 deaths each year because of disease, with tuberculosis the biggest killer. In May 2004 a senior prison officer reported 15 deaths a week, and a peak of 130 deaths in March of that year, in just one of the prisons in Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo.

Since then the crisis has deteriorated greatly as all the country’s services have entered meltdown after Mr Mugabe’s refusal to leave office in the wake of rigged polls.

The Times spent ten days in one of the “better” prisons in Bulawayo last year, surrounded by young skeletal men who fought over small plates of sadza (local maize), and noted severe overcrowding, overflowing toilets, water and electricity cuts, and a lack of blankets and basic commodities such as soap. Those without people on the outside to bring them food face almost certain starvation unless they find another solution, such as resorting to prostitution.

Prison populations also have high rates of HIV/Aids infection, with some reports estimating that more than half of prisoners are HIV-positive. Antiretrovirals are unavailable and the dietary requirements of treatment cannot be met in any case.

There are few drugs for the treatment of tuberculosis and other diseases, and the cramped and filthy conditions ease the transmission of infection. Late last year and early this year a cholera outbreak in Harare’s Central Prison killed four to five prisoners each day, with a peak of 18 deaths in one day, according to prison officers.

Original article

(Posted on April 30, 2009)

     Previous story       Next Story       Post a Comment     Send This Page      Search

Comments

1 — Anonymous wrote at 7:04 PM on April 30:

Anywhere on the planet where Africans congregate is a disaster. The surest way that your can bring similar situations to your community (and for your children to experience) is to import more Africans.

2 — Anonymous wrote at 7:20 PM on April 30:

I read some of the comments on the Daily Telegraph website. Most of them were variations of “The UK and the USA must go in and stop this”

Disgusting!. The commies chased the UK out of Zom 30 years ago. The USA never had anything to do with Zim. So why should we go in to save Zim?

Oh, I know, so the ACLU, ADL, SPLC and the Obama administration can send White American military to prison for war crimes against the Zim army and Mugabe’s thugs.

3 — Graham R wrote at 2:04 AM on May 1:

Close Gitmo & send the inmates to Zimbabwe

4 — fred wrote at 10:06 AM on May 1:

there are no third world countries- only third world people.

5 — Yorkshireman wrote at 10:12 AM on May 1:

This should surprise no one. Mugabe would just love a bunch of White Colonial mercenaries decending on his jails to release prisoners from a living hell. Everything wrong in the country would be their fault. Anyway, what would the rescuers do with 35,000 sick and starving africans? Better look at history when liberated nazi concentration camps were still sealed because of the fear of unleashing TB, AIDS, typhoid and cholera on the general population. It not only takes the right kind of food, but lots of time, supplies and medical personnel, none of which would be available. Mugabe and his family will be safe in Hong Kong because they have already done a deal with the Chinese over minerals and diamonds. His goons are, even now, scooping up all they can grab pending his downfall.

6 — SKIP wrote at 6:57 PM on May 1:

The surest way that your can bring similar situations to your community (and for your children to experience) is to import more Africans.

And that my friend, is EXACTLY what the U.S. government is doing as we speak.

7 — SKIP wrote at 1:09 AM on May 2:

Mugabe and his family will be safe in Hong Kong because they have already done a deal with the Chinese over minerals and diamonds. His goons are, even now, scooping up all they can grab pending his downfall.

I predicted and still do predict, that Mugabe and friends will go to Saudi Arabia, as did Edi Amin and live in royal fashion and safety.

8 — adam12 wrote at 6:56 PM on May 2:

Black Pride: success of Zimbabwe as a nation! All black ruled nations are econimic failures, like the race, after white rule/colonialism is replaced with blacks. South Africa will fail in about 10 years from now.

9 — Uncle Nasty wrote at 3:21 AM on May 4:

adam12 writes: South Africa will fail in about 10 years from now.

I am not too sure that it will even take that long. Right now the ANC govt. is pretty much bankrupt and is pinning all its hopes on the gazillions that they hope to make from hosting the 2010 (soccer) world cup. Unfortunately for them the preparations for an event such as this — Even Germany prepared for four years — have not properly started — even at this late date, pretty much guaranteeing an economical disaster of almost African proportions.

10 — B J Deller wrote at 6:19 AM on May 4:

When We lived in South Africa, we remeber the that the various Western governments were continually warned by the Rhodesians and the SA govt. on what would happen and it has, only worse. There were examples already in much of the rest of Africa so no excuses are posssible as the precedents existed, but even now those same people who were instrumental in facilitating the black govermnents , mostly terrorists, to grab power are denying that they have done wrong as many Zimabaweans have died of preventable disease, brutality and starvation, and still insist that thy did teb right thing and even Mandela is venerated in the UK but he did even less as a leader except be a “martyr” figure-head.

It looks as though most of the black Africans (as opposed to the white ones, etc) will have to endure the 100 yrs or so of misery (except for the leaders) until civilisation finally is accepted by them all to our standards, if that is ever possible.

11 — Soprano Fan wrote at 12:02 PM on May 4:

Why is this article even newsworthy? Zimbabweans on the outside are experiencing THE SAME CONDITIONS as the Zimbabweans on the inside.

In fact, Zimbabwe prisoners have it better than many Zimbabweans on the outside. A roof over their heads, for starters.

No aid to Zimbabwe. Let Zimbabwe stew in its own juice. Let a hundred flowers bloom over Zimbabwe’s grave. Let a hundred jackals contest over her remains.


Home      Top      Previous story       Next Story      Send This Page      Search