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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Inclusive government - Index of articles
Civilian-military
relations
General Agricultural
& Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe [GAPWUZ]
February 25, 2010
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Further
to the letter sent to the ZCTU
regarding the interrogation of the General-Secretary and staff of
GAPWUZ
by members of the Joint Operations Command [JOC], GAPWUZ would wish
to point out that this harassment is contrary to both the Global
Political Agreement [GPA] and Constitutional Amendment 19 [see
Appendices 1 and 2].
The intention
of the Parties to the Agreement, that the military and the security
forces be placed under full civilian control, was expressed in the
GPA, codified in Constitutional
Amendment 19, and finally expressed in the Zimbabwe National
Security Council Act, passed by the Zimbabwe Parliament on 9 February
2009. As the Bill stated, the intention of the legislature was as
follows:
- Reviewing
national policies on security, defence, law and order and recommending
or directing appropriate action;
- Reviewing
national, regional and international security, political and defence
developments and recommending or directing appropriate action;
- Considering
and approving proposals relating to the nation's strategic
security and defence requirements;
- Receiving
and considering national security reports and giving general or
specific directives to the security forces;
- Ensuring
that the operations of the security forces comply with the Constitution
and any other law;
- Exercising
any other function that the Cabinet may delegate to the Council;
- Generally
keeping the nation in a state of preparedness to meet any threat
or security.
It is absolutely
clear that all the Parties intended that the security forces be
placed wholly under civilian control under a committee set up by
law with the security forces reporting to this committee, and that
therefore there would be no independent existence of any other body,
such as JOC, except with the authority of the National Security
Council [ZNSC]. This was a critical development in the aftermath
of the violence in 2008, and the uncontested evidence that the security
forces had been involved in human rights violations since 2000.
It is therefore
an obvious breach of all these understandings, and the Zimbabwe
National Security CouncilAct, that the Joint Operations Command
summons, under duress, a civilian organisation, no matter which
organisation, and then interrogates that organisation about issues
that are evidently not within JOC's mandate, and were not
apparently authorised by the ZNSC.
The issue does
not concern GAPWUZ or the labour movement alone. Unless the security
forces are placed wholly under civilian control, as is clearly envisaged
by the creation of the Zimbabwe National Security Council, and the
Joint Operations Command is disbanded, then situations, such as
that experienced by GAPWUZ last week, will persist. This is a situation
of extreme seriousness and requires urgent action by the political
parties, the labour movement, and civil society.
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