Dzamara’s wife living in fear

via Dzamara’s wife living in fear – The Standard April 19, 2015

TWO young children — apparently looking for comfort — take turns to sit on the lap of their mother, Sheffra Dzamara who has now spent more than a month looking for her husband Itai Dzamara who was abducted by suspected State security agents on March 9.

by VENERANDA LANGA

The older of the two, a seven-year-old boy intermittently sucked his thumb as he gazed at the members from the MDC-T Assembly of Women who had brought groceries for the family at their house in Glen Norah on Friday.
The younger one, a three-year-old girl looked innocently as she sat on the lap of chairperson of the MDC-T Assembly of Women Lynette Karenyi while her mother narrated Dzamara’s ordeal at the hands of his abductors.

“Before my husband [Itai Dzamara] was abducted on March 9, we saw two very suspicious twin cab trucks continuously roving around the vicinity of our house on March 5,” Sheffra said.

“I only managed to record number plates of one of the vehicles, AAM 1732, but I could only see part of the number plates of the other vehicle, which were ABB 2.”

Dzamara’s wife said she noted that there were three men inside the vehicles.

She said the day he was abducted, Itai had gone for his usual hair cut at a barber shop near where they stayed not knowing that he was being hunted as an outspoken democracy activist.

“I was busy doing my chores when some people called me and said I should go to the barber shop because there was a problem. The people there narrated to me that the men in the twin cab had pretended that they were looking for a thief. The men then asked a child nearby to identify if the person having a haircut was Itai, and when the child answered in the affirmative, they then arrested my husband and bundled him into their vehicle,” She said.
Almost in tears, Sheffra said that was the last time she saw her husband.

She is now struggling to fend for their family as her husband was the sole breadwinner.
“This incident severely affects me as an unemployed woman who had been surviving through support from my husband who was a journalist,” she said.

“I am a mother of two very young children and one of them has not even started school. I do not even know how I can take care of the children now that their father has been abducted and they have a very long way to start and complete their education.”

Sheffra said her survival together with the two children to date had been very difficult, and it was through different well-wishers such as sympathetic neighbours and opposition political parties such as the MDC-T.
Dzamara’s wife said her husband’s family had been very supportive, both financially and emotionally at a time when she was heartbroken and did not know where to start.

“I have a very strong feeling in my heart that my husband is alive and that God is on his side and is taking care of him in the hands of his abductors. I keep praying for him, and several people have prayed with me for him,” she said.

Sheffra said it was very inhumane and unfair, as well as unlawful, to detain someone and deprive a family of a husband and father.

“If my husband is a thief – like what the abductors said when they took him – then the lawful thing to do is to take him to the courts where he will be tried and jailed if found guilty,” she said.
“At least as a family we will know where he is. I feel it would be better for me and the kids to visit him in jail as compared to not knowing his whereabouts. If he is innocent, they must release him because his family needs him.”

Sheffra said her son, who is currently in Grade Two, was now able to sense that there was something wrong and that his father was missing.

“The boy often says if his father were to come back he would run in happiness and hug him. The girl often asks when her dad will come back home with a packet of chips because he was a good father who used to bring goodies to the children after work,” she said.

Dzamara’s wife said she was now living in fear for her life as well after the abduction of her husband.
“I am very scared because I actually saw the men who were moving around and whom I strongly suspect abducted my husband. I am even scared to go visiting friends, and even to move around in the city centre, or to go shopping. I am no longer free and am not living a normal life due to fear,” she said.

One of Dzamara’s sisters who did not want to be identified fearing for her life, said the whole family was severely affected by the abduction and pleaded for the release of her brother.

“We miss him as a brother and appeal to those who abducted him to release him. If there is a crime that he committed, then they should take him to court as per the requirements of the law,” she said.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 7
  • comment-avatar
    The Mind Boggles 9 years ago

    My heart goes out to this family.

  • comment-avatar
    Lindy Lou 9 years ago

    Give them Asylum in The UK. Or USA now.

  • comment-avatar
    Hatina 9 years ago

    Zimbabwe is not a free country at all, thats one thing we fooled ourselves in 1980, when most people were singing “Zanu yaramba zvemadhisinyongoro…!”
    By voting for Zanu in 1980, Zimbabwe was pushed to another higher level of oppression…!

  • comment-avatar
    Michael 9 years ago

    If Dzamara is still alive it would be one of the Wonders of the Modern World. The State will not want to produce him – since that would lead to the exposure of who abducted and held him.

    It is more likely that he is in a concrete box at the bottom of Lake Kariba – a way in which ZANU-PF agents treated other abductees in the past. In 2008 – when there was a spate of abductions – the circumstances were different. Mbeki tried to bully the MDC to join a GNU and it was clear that that would not happen unless the abductees were produced and legally dealt with.

    At present there is no such foreign pressure on Mugabe and he would not react to internal pressure. The only way to get rid of the problem would be if millions of Zimbabweans join hands and rid themselves of the pestilence they face through a peaceful process of demonstrations.

  • comment-avatar
    Tsvungu Mapesa 9 years ago

    Those who abducted innocent Dzamara should know that one day God will give them a harsh penalty.To the Dzamara family God will unite you with your family member.

  • comment-avatar
    Garikayi 9 years ago

    I feel sorry for the poor mother and hr innocent children. GOD be with this family and shame on Mugabe and his henchmen. One day we will know and some people will have to account for their actions.

  • comment-avatar
    The Mind Boggles 9 years ago

    Yes Garikayi the mother and children are innocent I agree but so was Itai!!! what the F*^k was his crime and where the F%$k is he?????? This is disgusting, I am not a religious man but I find myself praying to someone for his safe release!!