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Visiting
parliamentary delegation say their deportation was "scandalous"
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 08, 18-Feb-05)
By Bridget Musa in Harare
February
18, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_008_1_eng.txt
A delegation
from South Africa’s official parliamentary opposition party, the
Democratic Alliance, DA, on a fact finding mission ahead of Zimbabwe’s
crucial March parliamentary election, was expelled on arrival at
Harare International Airport on Friday, February 18.
The three officials,
DA deputy leader Joe Seremane, party spokesman Douglas Gibson and
backbench MP Paul Boughey, were labelled prohibited immigrants and
put on the same South African Airway plane on which they had arrived.
The plane left Harare in the afternoon an hour after landing.
Gibson said
they were shocked at the treatment by Zimbabwe’s immigration officials.
They had expected to be welcomed as honoured guests from a friendly
neighbouring country.
"We are
going to appeal regarding us being treated as prohibited immigrants.
We didn’t expect this to happen," Gibson told IWPR in Harare.
He said they had written in advance to the Zimbabwe government,
through the country’s South African embassy in Harare and Zimbabwe’s
ministry of information, requesting a meeting with President Robert
Mugabe and other government officials.
The DA officials
said they had also wanted to meet other organisations to understand
the Zimbabwean situation ahead of the March 31 parliamentary election
and assess whether a free and fair poll was possible. "Clearly,
we have to suppose that the election will be a farce," said
Gibson. "Our treatment was scandalous, but we can only conclude
that the people of Zimbabwe are daily facing even worse treatment
than we have received."
Seremane told
IWPR their deportation showed that the Zimbabwean government had
something to hide, particularly in the field of human rights abuses
and lack of freedom of expression and association. He said the DA
was concerned about allegations of violation of human rights and
the disregard by Mugabe’s government of principles and guidelines
set down by the Southern Africa Development Community, SADC, for
the conduct of Zimbabwe’s election.
"We recognise
Zimbabwe’s sovereignty," said Seremane, a veteran of the guerrilla
struggle against apartheid in South Africa. "We are going to
appeal. I am very sad that this has happened. It seems that something
is being hidden. I don’t think it was proper to deport us.
"We are
passionate about democracy and democracy in the southern region
and in Africa. And where SADC principles are being threatened, we
want to know."
This is the
third South African delegation to be deported from Zimbabwe, after
representatives of the Congress of South African Trade Unions were
expelled first in October last year and then again early this month.
The purpose
of Cosatu’s visits was to find out how the current political crisis
is affecting Zimbabwe’s workers
The first 13-member
Cosatu group was arrested by intelligence officers and driven to
Beitbridge border post - on the Limpopo River between Zimbabwe and
South Africa - in the middle of the night after being accused of
unauthorised meddling in Zimbabwe’s domestic affairs. It had hoped
to meet trade unionists, government officials and human rights groups.
The second Cosatu group was put back on the plane on which they
arrived.
*Bridget
Musa is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
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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