ZIM POLICE ARREST MAN FOR CUTTING GRASS – THIS IS NOT FREEDOM
In Zimbabwe, people are being punished for doing good things. This is not new. For 45 years, ZANU PF has controlled our country with fear and violence. They say we are free, but we are not. They say we have democracy, but they lie. What happened to journalist and publisher Matthew Takaona is just more proof that we are not free.
Takaona is not a criminal. He is a veteran journalist, a publisher at the Masvingo Mirror, and also an opposition activist. He loves Zimbabwe. He wants to see the country safe and clean. So what did he do wrong? Nothing. He and others were cutting grass near Mushayavanhu Primary School in Gutu. This grass was near the road and very dangerous to drivers and children. They were helping the community. But instead of being thanked, Takaona was arrested.
Police came with a special team called Ferret. This is a crack police and intelligence group, known for targeting activists. They arrested Takaona and others simply because they did not inform a local ZANU PF councillor, Benson Dandira. Yes – in Zimbabwe, you need permission from the ruling party even to cut grass. That is how low we have fallen.
The lawyers who represented Takaona said what he did was completely legal. There was no law broken. But that didn’t stop the police from trying to find a reason to keep him. They searched and searched for a charge. They found nothing. At the end, they had no choice but to release him. But damage had already been done. The message is clear: if you are not ZANU PF, you will suffer, even for doing good.
This is why I continue to speak out. I am a political activist. I write and post these articles on my blog to show the world what is happening in Zimbabwe. I speak for the people who are too scared to speak. I speak for the ones who are arrested, beaten, and silenced. I speak for the ones who are tired but cannot leave. We are being punished for wanting a better country.
ZANU PF has turned everything upside down. Good is now bad. Helping is now a crime. And silence is what they want from all of us. But I will not be silent. Many others will not be silent either. We are tired of being afraid. We are tired of watching our country fall apart while the rich and powerful live in comfort.
If someone can be arrested for cutting grass, what next? Will we be arrested for giving food to the hungry? For helping an old person cross the road? For fixing a broken bridge? The truth is – we are already in a prison, even if we are not behind bars.
This is why our fight must continue. We need real democracy. Not the fake one they talk about on TV. Not the one written in papers but ignored in real life. We want leaders who care about people, not power. We want a government that lets people live in peace, not in fear.
Matthew Takaona is free now, but many others are not. Some are in jail. Some are in exile. Some are dead. But their fight lives on. Our fight lives on. We will not stop until Zimbabwe is free.
This is not just about cutting grass. It is about cutting the chains that hold us down. It is about cutting the lies, the fear, and the silence. We are ready. We are angry. And we are not afraid.