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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Jestina Mukoko

Interviewed May 4, 2011

The role of international leaders and organizations was overwhelming. There’s a friend who kept a tab on some of the statements that came in the paper. And I think, as a result of new technologies, it was also easy for me just to Google on the Internet. And I was humbled. Since I joined the Zimbabwe Peace Project in January 2007, I had interacted internationally, talking about the work that the Zimbabwe Peace Project does, and also sharing the reports that the Zimbabwe Peace Project was compiling.

And so a lot of organizations were aware of the work that I was doing. And so that amplification of voices demanding my unconditional release was something that came out of probably the engagements that I had had prior to my abduction. And I think some of them even continued to do this, some of them even came to Zimbabwe. I remember meeting the secretary general of Amnesty International. And while she was at it, she was also attacked. But I suppose she didn’t mind being attacked because she was standing for a cause. And I also suspect that it was those international messages that saw my abductors keeping torture – physical torture at bay from the second day up to the fourth day and beyond the fifth day.

So I think it was that international pressure that was being applied on the government that made them move two steps back in terms of physically torturing me. And I think – even towards the end of the case, I think it was also that pressure that made the government want to deal with my case and finalize it, because every time I appeared in court the bad publicity would mount on the government. And somehow, I think they needed to get rid of it. And I think it really played a significant factor in this whole situation , and I’m very grateful for that.