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Don Mattera and African solidarity team urge regional action on
Zimbabwe
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
December 01, 2006
Over the past week, in an African solidarity
visit to Zimbabwe, civil society leaders from across the continent
have been speaking with local NGOs, trade unions, women’s movement,
churches, students, and individuals in businesses and government
on the challenges facing civil society in the country.
"Africans have a responsibility
to speak out against the suffering of our brothers and sisters..
" says Dr Don Mattera, South African writer and community
activist, and a member of the team.
In the team’s communiqué, released
today, they have expressed concern with the ongoing crackdown on
freedoms of expression, association and assembly; and the Zimbabwe
government’s apathy towards the spiralling poverty in the country.
They have also emphasised the importance of renewed and ongoing
pressure on Zimbabwe by African states and civil society.
"As a human rights worker, I
have been watching with dismay as the governance, human rights and
hence the economy has deteriorated in Zimbabwe over the last five
years," says Don Deya, the executive director of the East
African Law Society based in Tanzania. "The greatest source
of my dismay is that the neighbouring states, especially the Republic
of South Africa, the Southern African Development Community (SADC)
and the African Union (AU) have steadfastly decided to do absolutely
nothing about it."
Along with Mattera and Deya, the team
included Luckson Chipare, former regional director of Media Institute
of South Africa; John Kapito, a commissioner at the Malawian Human
Rights Commission; Hannah Forster, executive director of the African
Centre for Democracy and Human Rights Studies in the Gambia; Jeremias
Langa, news director of SOICO, the only independent broadcaster
in Mozambique and Fatoumata Toure, of the Global Pan African Movement,
based in Kampala.
In addition to public and individual
meetings on human rights and humanitarian issues, the team has held
focused discussions on the controversial development of a Zimbabwean
Human Rights Commission, and devastating impact of forced removals.
The team will be issuing a brief summary
of the visit’s observations on 10 December, with the full report
to follow in January 2007.
"We hope that the team’s visit
has shown Zimbabwean civil society that their neighbours support
them, and that it has delivered a strong regional message to the
Zimbabwean government – African civil society will not stand by
and watch idly while Zimbabwean citizens are suffering,"
says Kumi Naidoo, CIVICUS Secretary General.
The solidarity visit is coordinated by
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, a network of 350 organisations in
Zimbabwe; and CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation,
an international organisation with members in over 100 countries,
dedicated to strengthening civil society around the world.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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