Harare — Jestina Mukoko's abduction, detention and torture in 2008, and the subsequent dropping of all charges by a full bench of Zimbabwe's Supreme Court on 28 September 2009, is serving as a timeline in a country emerging from the depths of despair into the first glimmer of hope.
Mukoko, a single mother, journalist and human rights campaigner, became a cause célèbre for both local and international human rights organizations, with her personal ordeal seen as a representation of the state's repression and its contempt for the rule of law.
The Supreme Court said in its judgment: "The court unanimously concludes that the state, through its agents, violated the applicant's constitutional rights protected under the constitution of Zimbabwe to an extent entitling the applicant to a permanent stay of criminal prosecution associated with the above violations."
Mukoko was charged with banditry, but many believe her work of collating the litany of human rights abuses committed against political activists, unionists and civil society members by President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF government - which held power before the current unity government - ensured that she would occupy the same dank prisons and suffer the same beatings as those whose stories she had documented.
After the judgment she told IRIN: "I came out of this experience not a bitter person, but a better person; better in the sense that I was able to understand what fellow Zimbabwean activists had been going through all this time."
In 2008 Zimbabwe was trapped in a vortex of political violence, widespread hunger, hyperinflation and keenly contested elections that threatened to end Mugabe's nearly three decades of rule.
Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and now prime minister, withdrew from the second round of the presidential poll - after narrowly failing to win the first round outright - in protest over the deaths of scores of activists, and the torture of hundreds if not thousands more.
Mukoko, head of the Zimbabwe Peace Project, a non-governmental organization that detailed human rights abuses such as gang rape and political violence allegedly perpetrated by the security forces, patiently transcribed the harrowing experiences of those who survived while they recuperated in hospitals or safe houses, fearing further arrests.
The international community, including African election monitors, declared Mugabe's uncontested presidential victory as hollow. On 15 September 2008, ZANU-PF and the MDC signed a power-sharing agreement, but it was only enacted in February 2009 with the formation of the unity government. The intervening months were marked by increased reports of state violence, meticulously documented by Mukoko.
"I am so relieved to know that the charges against me have been dropped, but I think the victory was only possible because of the support from the international community, fellow journalists and colleagues in civic society, and human rights defenders," she told IRIN.
The abduction
In the early hours of 13 December 2008 a group of masked men and a woman hauled Mukoko from her bed, and under the terrified gaze of her teenage son, bundled her into an unmarked car and disappeared as fast as they had arrived.
Dressed in only her nightdress, her prescription medicine left by her bedside, she disappeared without a trace. Over the next few days, then weeks, people expected her body to be found by the roadside, or stumbled upon in a shallow grave by someone collecting firewood in the bush.
In fact, she was constantly being moved from one police station to another and other places of detention. Disorientated and suffering round after round of interrogation, during which she was made to kneel on gravel, punctuated with beatings on the soles of her feet, to try to force her to admit she was recruiting Zimbabweans for military training in neighbouring Botswana.
On 2 March 2009, a month after the unity government was formed, amid a furore over her detention by local and international journalists as well as human rights organizations, she was released on bail. She immediately filed a court challenge over the manner of her "arrest", and violation of her human rights.
Emotional scars
"I view the judgment in a positive sense, in that it resulted in a reform of the judiciary, especially at a time when the country is going through a constitution-making process, and that the same charges brought against other activists will be dropped," she said.
The emotional scars of her ordeal are still fresh. "It is difficult at this stage to give a detailed account of what I went through because it is such an emotional subject. I would really have to psych up for that kind of discussion."
The question that Mukoko cannot answer is why she was targeted for abduction. "It has been suggested that it may have been because of the work that our organization was doing, but I was shocked that I was being charged for recruiting people to undergo military training."
The ordeal has not deterred her or her organization from documenting human rights abuses.
"I am a widowed mother, and what I went through brought a lot of trauma to my family, especially to my son, who did not know if he had lost the only remaining parent that he had."
[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations ]

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Thanks God Jestina Mukoko is free. Bob the Tsotsi's Supreme Court finally had the guts to expose his corrupt allies and their utter lack of respect for human rights. These ZANU thugs need to be brought to justice.
This is the best news to come out of Zimbabwe in a long time. Justice had been done, and the ZANU PF monkeys that orchestrated this manufactured crime should be punished for it. Rip their heads off.
Awt;
You have a short memory. Not so long ago the same criminal justice system freed Tsvangirai of treason; freed the thugs that killed Cain Nkala; freed Gasela and Welshman Ncube and many other MDC thugs who had committed heinous crimes.
The issue is that there has always been the observance of the rule of law in Zimbabwe. Our courts have never been influenced by anyone or anything in their determination of issue brought before them. They are independent of any interference whatsoever.
By this latest judgment we, as Zimbabwe, are merely proving to idiotic propagandists like you that we are a God fearing and law abiding people and not what you think about us.
Having said that; it is important to note that the acquittal does not mean Jestina did not commit the crime alleged. All that the judgment is saying is that the rights of an accused should always be respected and the moment the court notices any semblance of abuse the case will not proceed; hence acquittal.
But then the accused can dramatize as did Jestina and her criminal friends. The MDC doctors who examined them are obviously partial. Mhosva hairovi mwachewe! One day Jestina shall be back in court on the same charges and get convicted. Shiri ine muririre wayo hairegi, that's what we know in my culture.
The good thing for Zimbabwe is that the recruitment of bandits stopped the moment Jestinas secret drive was exposed. The fact that she was not convicted is nothing to worry about; we actually should be happy about it because she will NEVER go back to her evil deeds.
If this was not warning enough then Jestina will be seen going back to her foolish endeavors again and will be caught red-handed this time round unless she matures and stop the foolish recruitment of bandits.
Takunya, you really are pathetic arent you.
The courts are indeed independent and yes... they freed Tsvangirai on fictitious charges, Cain Nkala on fictitious charges and Gesala and Welshmanon, again on fictitious charge.
Yet you say they comitted heinous crimes! If these crimes existed, you must be really concerned that the police keep screwing these cases up so the so called perpetrators get released without charge!
In reality, these crimes never existed, and justice finally gets served.
As you say "The issue is that there has always been the observance of the rule of law in Zimbabwe. Our courts have never been influenced by anyone or anything in their determination of issue brought before them. They are independent of any interference whatsoever. "
hence these people are arrested under false charges and released when these cases finally are heard before your independeent judges.
Goes to show how corrupt the prosecution is dont you think?
So tell me why Justina's rights were abused. Lets talk through that. What happened?
You say that "One day Jestina shall be back in court on the same charges and get convicted."
I'm afraid this isnt possible, not only because the crimes were manufactured in the first place, but because of her abuse in custody, she cant be tried for these crimes again.
Simple for most, difficult for you.
So tell me, if you think she actually recruited bandits, you must be super concerned that she has effectively got away with it.