The soldiers surrounded 15 protesters near a cluster of huts after a fight in the Zimbabwean capital Harare, where shops were looted and bullets fired.

"We must have had the fear, but they are stubborn and stubborn, and three of them refused to ride in the truck, which angered us," an army sergeant told The Times of Britain.

The sergeant then described how these civilians were taken to a sewage station where they were forced to dive into human excrement and swim in it so that they would be sufficiently vaccinated. "Then we beat them as they should so they could not walk," he said.

He goes to pray in the church every week, and calls on God to pardon him for standing with the regime that has been reeling since he was a student at the school.

The bankrupt state of Zimbabwe maintains a strong security force to force the oppressed people to colonize. Sarmiq said his country's failed economy was the poorest of all, including soldiers. "Every child in Zimbabwe goes to bed at night without taking anything."

Because of the closure of the Internet by the government, news of torture, rape and murder has not yet been released.

In these countries, where the scarcity of money, food, fuel and even regime loyalists is striking, the lines of differentiation in traditional conflicts have become blurred.

"The morale of the army is in the bottom and the economy is collapsing," the Independent newspaper reported yesterday.

"Do you think that if I enter a certain area and find a broken shop, I will leave the gate and the windows, I will leave it, leaving the goods inside, certainly not, I will take from him what I can carry," he said.

Observers say that the mask of the incumbent President Mananguagua has been removed, and that his regime has outstripped his predecessor Robert Mugabe's regime. The central army is hesitant that there is another coup attempt on the way.