Saturday 31 August 2013

Chadema cadre in deep pains, fears he may die

            

Evodius Justinian (30) is served medicine by his wife Proscovia Cyrilo outside their house in Bukoba. He is appealing for help to get treated for an undisclosed ailment he suffered while in police custody awaiting trial for terrorism charges that have since been dropped.
PHOTO | Joas Kaijage 
By Joas Kaijage, The Citizen on Saturday Correspondent  (email the author)

Posted  Saturday, August 31  2013 at  08:00
In Summary
Evodius Justinian, 30, complains of inexorable pains throughout his body allegedly sustained from torture by security personnel as they forced him to reveal information related to the alleged offences soon after his arrest and that of other opposition party sympathisers.


Bukoba. One of the men cleared of terrorism charges by the High Court in Tabora has recounted a harrowing experience of torture by the police for which he is now seeking urgent medical treatment to save his life.
Evodius Justinian, 30, complains of inexorable pains throughout his body allegedly sustained from torture by security personnel as they forced him to reveal information related to the alleged offences soon after his arrest and that of other opposition party sympathisers.
As a youthful cadre of Chadema, he said he was arrested in Bukoba and sent to Mwanza before he was flown to Dar es Salaam under tight security by police officers.
He had been linked to a campaign fracas in the hotly contested Igunga by-election in which the ruling CCM faced a scare from Chadema. The arrested opposition youth were accused of throwing acid at, and causing grievous harm to a CCM youth.
Having been cleared of the more serious crime, Evodius will still have to fight over the acid attack charges for which he is out on bail. However, he fears his deteriorating health may not see him clear his name if urgent help to receive treatment is not forthcoming.
“I was brutally tortured during interrogation by different police officers on my way to Dar es Salaam and Igunga. They used electronic devices to send excruciating shocks to my secret parts and nipples. These are pains I will never forget,” he explained in an interview from his home, and also appealed for help.
He says he has suffered due to his political inclination and wants his party leaders to come to his aid.
“I have developed a persistent coughing and rushes all over the body. I have painful scars from the severe beating in the three months that we remained under police custody,” he said and he showed the injuries to this reporter. “I fear for my life because the whole of my body is aching and traumatised.”
He says he has been in touch with Chadema General Secretary, Wilbrod Slaa, whom he said had promised to provide some kind of support to enable the five youth cadres who were released to pursue their normal life.
The Chadema district chairperson for Bukoba, Mr Victor Sherejeh, told The Citizen on Saturday that they were looking at means to intervene over the appeal for urgent treatment.
“Help from the party headquarters may take long to reach the victims as officials were out conducting countrywide awareness campaigns on the constitution.
He said the local office was planning to fund-raise to enable Evodius to go for specialised medical check up for his deteriorating health in the next few days.


Since his release a few weeks ago, several people have been flocking to his parents’ residence in Kastam, a locality on the periphery of Bukoba town to console him.
He was also attracting heightened interest following reports that linked the four suspects to Chadema’s defence and security director Wilfred Lwakatare who is currently undergoing treatment in India after facing a similar predicament in Dar es Salaam.
According to media reports, soon after their acquittal, Chadema national leaders have accused the government of using the police to torment its supporters by framing them with serious criminal charges.
The party has claimed the arrest and charging of Evodius and his colleagues was a scheme to paint the opposition party as one which loves or sponsors terrorism.
Evodius recollects that during his arrest in April last year, the only items the police collected from his home were three CD copies of Chadema public gatherings and items on US President Barack Obama.
As he ponders his future, he is grateful that the current health complications were not caused by the police in Bukoba. “In fact they were very generous such that one of them bought me a toothbrush and tooth paste in additional to a Sh5,000 airtime voucher to communicate with relatives.” They were the real face of disciplined and caring officers until their colleagues in 
 
source: The citizen