Monday, November 2, 2009

Village Justice

When we first arrived at our village, and asked the Peace Corps volunteer there from 2007-2009 if he had ever had any problems with theft, he said no. Then he laughed a little, and said, "O.K., this one time I left the window open when I went away, and a candy bar was stolen." People kept telling us how safe it was here. Our headman had some goats stolen once, but the thief, who lived in Kasama, was found and arrested. The school had some solar panels stolen. But other than some firewood and indigenous fruits we left outside, we have never had anything of any monetary value taken.

So we were shocked when we returned home at around four in the afternoon on Halloween and found someone had tampered with our lock with a flat object, possibly a screwdriver. The lock was closed, so at first we thought the break-in attempt had failed. Then we looked inside. Things were just as messy as we had left them, but things were missing from the shelves in our bedroom, the mosquito net was untucked from the bed, and cartons of my thyroid medicine had been removed from a bag under the bed and tossed beside a pile of dirty clothes. Our solar charger, several packages of batteries, and a flashlight were missing. The bag containing our MP3 player was disturbed, but the MP3 player was untouched. We had money hidden, but the thief didn't find it. He had taken some batteries, but left a package of identical batteries untouched on my shelf.

I felt like I had swallowed a mango pit that was pressing painfully against my stomach. My heart was running the Boston Marathon. Worst of all, at that moment, what I wanted most was to go home to America. The repeated infections, bad sunburn I'd got on a boat at Lake Tang, diarrhea that came and went, the homesickness, alone was bearable. But now theft, invasion of the one place in our village in which we had real privacy... why try to help people that stole from you?

Since the lock was broken, Chris stayed at our house and talked with our host father, who summoned the Community Crime Prevention Unit (CCPU). I went to the road with my cell phone to call the Peace Corps Safety and Security Officer in Lusaka, who helped immensely and called Peace Corps staff in Kasama, then spoke with my and Chris' Associate Peace Corp directors. Then I went to inform the school headmaster and a senior teacher, who went with me to the village headman to help translate.

By the time I returned, night had fallen, and Chris and I sat pathetically on our porch beside a candle, knawing on half a loaf of banana bread, the only food we'd had since breakfast. Our host father came to invite us to eat nshima. He told us people were saying it was an "inside job" because only a few items had been stolen; most likely the thief was from our village and broke into our house to steal specific items, not clear us out completely. Some people were even blaming the family that lived around us for not preventing the theft, or worse, saying they stole from us. This, we didn't believe, but our host father was very distressed and later told us he'd questioned his three teenaged children.


Before going to bed, I set an axe between the headboard of the bed and the wall. Then I fell into a restless sleep, punctuated by moments I'd awake suddenly after hearing noises outside, and listen intently, my heart beating with Lariam-fueled paranoia. Chris, on the other hand, slept fine.


The following morning, at around 9 am, the CCPU came marching into our yard bearing some of our batteries that had been stolen. Our neighbor, a man that takes guitar lessons from Chris and English lessons from me, said he had become suspicious of his nephew, and upon entering his house, found the batteries. The twenty-year old boy confessed and the CCPU found the rest of our belongings, hidden in a hole under a rock which had been urinated on. Our flashlight, which doesn't take batteries, and you shake to charge it, had been smashed. Apparently the guy couldn't figure out how to use it. Our solar charger had been damaged and knocked around a bit, and the connecting cable was cut. About half of our batteries had been recovered. We also got back a bottle of shampoo, an inhaler, and my old cell phone from the states, which he didn't realize had been stolen. We've speculated quite a bit on why he took the inhaler. Chris' guess is that the package resembles a pack of cigarettes.


An impromptu community trial was arranged at the school to determine punishment. The robber sat under a tree, his head bowed, skinny legs poking out from baggy faded brown shorts, and one wrist shackled in a pair of ancient handcuffs. The headman, CCPU, and Chris and I stood around him, surrounded by a gaggle of children pushing frantically to get a view, and somber adults. The boy (he was so thin, helpless, and baby-faced that calling him a man or guy doesn't seem right) was mentally ill, we were told. He'd stolen before. A couple of days before breaking into our house, he'd stolen a mattress from a teacher's house. The headman, the boy's grandmother, and another older man scolded him in rapid-fire icibemba. Chris bent down, and in Bemba, said "We are here to help the village. Why did you steal from us?" The boy just mumbled that he didn't know. The community decided that he should go to jail. Jails in Zambia are horrible pits of dispair, where they don't think twice about beating prisoners. Our friend's host father had spent two nights there, and had to pay the biggest prisoner there ZMK 5,000 a day or the man would kick his butt. But there are no real facilities for the mentally ill, and the consensus was that if he remained in the village, he'd continue to steal.


The Peace Corps staff in Kasama had heard about our ordeal, and Ted and Scorpion came to the rescue, bringing us a new lock and a flashlight. The police in Kasama have limited funds and there is a fuel shortage, so you can only buy 5g of black market gas for over $10, so we would have to bring the thief to them. At that time, he was being held by the CCPU near his uncle's house. With nothing else to do on a Sunday morning after church let out, a large crowd of children sneered at him. Chris and I got into the land cruiser, then three men escorted the placid boy in behind us, and BashiKatongo, a senior member of the CCPU, came along to hold the boy and present the story of his capture to the police. As we rolled away from the village, the children stood on the red sand, waving enthusiastically. BashiKatongo grabbed the boy's hand and made him wave back. After a sleepless night and the comforting bounce of the cruiser speeding over the mud, I dozed. Chris awkwardly held the boy's handcuffs when BashiKatongo had to pee. And the boy looked in wonder at the bush speeding by out the window. This was his first time ever traveling to Kasama.

At the police station, we handed over the "evidence," a plastic Shoprite bag full of the recovered objects that had been stolen. We made a statement and the police locked the boy in a cell, a large concrete room with one side that was an open window with bars that faced the courtyard. The trial was supposed to be yesterday, and then today, now it's tommorrow. He's expected to plead guilty, so we won't have to testify.

3 comments:

  1. Nicole - I think you should be writing crime stories while you're in the Peace Corp!! What the heck - the kid stole a few batteries & you condemn him to the Zambian penitentiary!! You should have made him do community service work - clean your floors, dig you a new latrine; anything but JAIL! Sounds like the poor kid has no family guidance, so what do you expect - you should have taken him under your wing, I am sure you & Chris could have made a better difference in his life! What was he planning on doing with all the batteries, or was he just stealing because he could?? I wanted to make sure you got back from Tanzania - OK. After reading your blogspot, I see you did & had a little excitement besides!! Did your infected toe clear up finally with the antibiotics?? Did you finally get my last package with the tarps?? Make sure you check on the kid to see that they don't leave him in jail forever - how old is he? Even here in the US they don't jail minors for such indiscrepancies. Well, we haven't had as much excitement as you but Tyler & Makayla came trick or treating over here for Halloween. Tyler was a zombie doctor & little miss "M" was - appropriately a monkey with curly tail & a banana combined. She truly is Andrea's daughter - there isn't much she misses or can't get into. She went to the pumpkin farm for pre-school & I asked her if she was going there to smash all the pumpkins. She thought for a few seconds & then said to me- "probably I will" but I am not really sure she knew what she said! Her tricks keep Heather & I laughing. Well let me know what you would like in your next package - more batteries, perhaps?? Take care & email me on your facebook - it's been a couple weeks since I have heard from you! Oh! we set our clocks back an hour so if I call you at 1:00 am my time it will really be 8:00am your time & not 7:00am like when I usually call - so should I call at 1 or 2:00am?? Let me know as I am supposed to be calling you in a couple weeks?? LOVE< HUGS< KISSES MOM, John, & Heather

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  2. Nicole & Chris - I love reading all about your adventures! I do agree with Debby, you & Chris chould have taken this boy under your wings and found some way for him to work for you. Is he able to communicate his thoughts or so disabled you didn't think you could help? I hope your toe is better. The photos are great thaniks for sharing! Jeanne

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  3. We just realized he broke our mp3 player and solar charger, two things which are invaluable to us. I am furious because he did not know what those things did or even how to work them, yet he tinkered with them so that they are damaged beyond repair. You can't buy those things here. The village agreed he should go to jail or he'd just steal again, so we conceded to their opinion. The problem with our village is people often aren't held accountable for their actions and are given slaps on the wrist. There is a chance he may go to a reform school or work camp. Also, I am of the opinion that I am sacrificing meat, dairy, and electricity to work and help people, so it is unacceptable for them to forcibly gain entry to my house and steal my belongings. I think you'd be more outraged if it happened to you.

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