As can be seen from Table 1 [above], the run up to the elections occurred against the background of the worst year since the Human Rights Forum began reporting on political violence, with every indication that 2008 will be even worse than 2007, and certainly the monthly average is more than double the worst previous year, which was 2007. In its May 2008 report, the Human Rights Forum also drew particular attention to the finding from its own data that human rights violations increase appreciably during elections. 2 As can be seen from Table 2 [below], eight of the fourteen violation types, recorded by the Human Rights Forum, increase significantly during elections. This analysis included the data from the March 2008 poll. Table 2 Months with elections compared to months without elections: July 2001 to April 2008 [Source: Human Rights Forum.]3 Non-Election Month N=51 116 5998 1653 9 47 1 796 6383 39 1686 768 9 4 1606 19115 Election Month N=31 433** 2911 2025* 19* 126** 31* 694 2963 88* 3151* 901 12 53 2827* 16234 Abductions arrest & detention Assault attempted murder death threats disappearance displacement Freedoms Murder Political discrimination property violation Rape school closure Torture Totals: * all significant at p=0.05; **all significant at p=0.01 or greater. Thus, there was serious apprehension by the Human Rights Forum about the possibility of political violence in the March election, which has been vindicated, not only by some violence during the preelection period, but, more seriously, in the interregnum between the March poll and second round Run-off between Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai. There have already been a number of reports indicating the seriousness of the current violence and its implications for a free and fair Runoff on 27 June 2008.4 All these reports have concluded that there have been, and continues to be, serious abuses of human rights, and that the Zimbabwe government, by commission or omission, is responsible for these violations. The violations are so serious that they even resulted in a special mission being sent to Zimbabwe by the SADC mediator, President Thabo Mbeki, and have drawn 2 3 4 See Human Rights Forum (2008), Can the elections in Zimbabwe be Free and Fair? Paper produced by the Research and Advocacy Unit [RAU] for the Human Rights Forum, HARARE: ZIMBABWE HUMAN RIGHTS NGO FORUM. See again Human Rights Forum (2008), Can the elections in Zimbabwe be Free and Fair? Paper produced by the Research and Advocacy Unit [RAU] for the Human Rights Forum, HARARE: ZIMBABWE HUMAN RIGHTS NGO FORUM. Reports have been issued by the Zimbabwe Peace Project, the Solidarity Peace Trust, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, amongst others.

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