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Unknown
First published: September 1, 2023 - Last updated: September 1, 2023
TITLE INFORMATION
Author: Hazel Cameron
Title: State-Organized Starvation
Subtitle: A Weapon of Extreme Mass Violence in Matabeleland South, 1984
Journal: Genocide Studies International
Volume: 12
Issue: 1
Year: Spring 2018 (Published online: April 10, 2017)
Pages: 26-47
pISSN: 2291-1847 -
Find a Library: WorldCat |
eISSN: 2291-1855 -
Find a Library: WorldCat
Language: English
Keywords:
Modern History:
20th Century |
African History:
Zimbabwean History |
Types:
Genocidal Rape /
Gukurahundi Genocide
FULL TEXT
Links:
- ResearchGate (Free Access)
- JSTOR (Restricted Access)
- University of Toronto Press (Restricted Access)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Author:
ORCID,
ResearchGate
Abstract:
»This paper explores an episode of state led extreme mass violence in Zimbabwe, commonly referred to as Gukurahundi, with a specific focus on the second phase of the campaign in Matabeleland South in early 1984. During this phase, the state targeted both the political structure of the main political opposition party of ZAPU, as well as the minority Ndebele ethnic group from which ZAPU drew much of its grassroots level political support. Between February and April 1984, the Government of Zimbabwe used food as a political and military weapon of coercion, torture, punishment, and death against the Ndebele people of Matabeleland South. Analysis of (a) transcripts of interviews with survivors and witnesses, and (b) official government communications, between the US Department of State and the American embassy in Harare during 1984, obtained by Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, sheds a critical new lens on the policy of starvation and punishment. The original sources compiled in this study provide evidence of: (1) the suffering of the innocent Ndebele victims of state crime, (2) the knowledge that was available to the Western diplomatic community, (3) the response of the US government to the atrocities, and (4) the response of the Government of Zimbabwe to the atrocities. This study concludes that the deprivation of food supplies, which formed a significant element of this state campaign, deliberately brought between 350,000 and 400,000 people to the extreme edge of starvation in contravention of international law. Corroborating reports from credible sources evidences that these Zimbabwean state crimes resulted in the death of men, women, and children from starvation and dehydration as well as through injuries and illness exacerbated by hunger and malnutrition induced by the government's strict curfew and forced starvation.«
(Source: Genocide Studies International)
Contents:
|
Introduction (p. 26) |
|
Background and Historical Context (p. 28) |
|
Famine Prevention Measures in Zimbabwe (p. 29) |
|
The (ab)Use of Food to Torture, Terrorize, and Starve, 1984 (p. 30) |
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Warnings of "Imminent Starvation" (p. 32) |
|
"[C]arrying the Can Alone on Matabeleland" (p. 34) |
|
The GOZ Response (p. 36) |
|
"The Issue Is [GOZ] Willingness"(p. 37) |
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GOZ's "Collective Punishment . . . of Innocent Hungry People" (p. 38) |
|
GOZ Rationale for State Crime (p. 41) |
|
Conclusion (p. 42) |
|
Acknowledgments (p. 43) |
|
Notes (p. 44) |
Wikipedia:
History of Africa:
History of Zimbabwe |
Genocide:
Gukurahundi |
Sex and the law:
Rape /
Genocidal rape
|