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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
UN
must respond to Zimbabwe crackdown
David Cronin, Inter Press Service
March 11, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=41555
Zimbabwe's crackdown
on political dissent may need to be discussed by the United Nations
Security Council, a prominent southern African human rights activist
declared Mar. 11.
Opponents of President
Robert Mugabe and his ruling ZANU-PF party have reported large-scale
harassment and intimidation in the tense period leading to elections
due later this month. With little prospect of the poll being conducted
in a free and fair manner, political activists are calling on international
bodies to explore new ways of applying pressure on Mugabe, the octogenarian
who has led Zimbabwe ever since winning independence from Britain
in 1980.
John Stewart,
vice-chairman of the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum, urged the European Union to consider
invoking a clause relating to democratic principles in the Cotonou
agreement, which underpins the bloc's relations with Africa. The
Cotonou Agreement is a treaty between the European Union and the
group of African, Caribbean and Pacific states (ACP countries).
It was signed in June 2000 in Cotonou, the largest city in Benin
in West Africa, by 79 ACP countries and the then 15 member states
of the European Union.
In 2002, the EU decided
to impose sanctions on Mugabe and his inner circle -- such as freezing
their assets and banning them from travelling to Europe -- after
initiating a 'political dialogue' under Article 8 of that accord.
But Stewart argues that
the Union should also study the possibility of invoking Article
9 of Cotonou. This states that democracy should be built "on
the basis of universally recognised principles" and that signatories,
including Zimbabwe, should ensure respect for human rights and the
rule of law.
According to Stewart,
the level of state-approved violence in Zimbabwe is now so serious
that the EU's military officials should be addressing it.
"I am not advocating
sending a Belgian platoon to Mozambique's border with Zimbabwe,"
he told IPS. "But this is an issue of peace and security. It
needs to be talked about."
Stewart, who was visiting
Brussels, added that an analysis of the EU on Zimbabwe may lead
to the country's situation being discussed by the UN Security Council.
A day earlier the EU's
foreign ministers issued a statement expressing concern that Zimbabwe's
presidential and parliamentary elections scheduled Mar. 29 are at
risk of being unfair. The EU has received no invitation to monitor
the poll's conduct, the ministers observed.
Although Stewart said
he was "glad" that Zimbabwe remained on the EU's agenda,
he argued that the ministers' statement "misses the point."
It is futile, he suggested, for the EU to call for free and fair
elections "when there is no question this is going to happen."
Those wishing to observe
the election have been told they need special permits from the government.
Wilbert Mandine, a former magistrate now working for the Zimbabwean
branch of the Media Institute for Southern Africa, noted that only
one organisation has so far been permitted to monitor the poll.
Unless more permits are granted, nearly all of the 11,000 polling
stations in the country are not likely to face any scrutiny, he
added.
And although Zimbabwe
has a law stating that the media should cover election campaigns
fairly and impartially, Mandine alleged that television coverage
is "tilted in favour of the ruling party."
At the end of February,
the launch of ZANU-PF's manifesto could be seen live on the Zimbabwean
Broadcasting Corporation. Yet the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change did not receive the same treatment when it formally began
its campaign a day later.
Takavafira
Zhou, president of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe, was arrested and tortured when he
took part in a 'Save our Education' protest in Harare last month.
Labelling Mugabe a "crocodile
liberator" and a "grasping kleptocrat", he said:
"We were promised paradise in 1980. What we have managed to
get is a bullet in the head and a diet of starvation."
Zhou accused the regime
of operating a policy of "systematic torture" against
teachers for about eight years. As a result the number of teachers
has shrunk from 150,000 to 70,000.
"Just last year,
we lost 25,000 teachers and this year we have lost 8,000,"
he said. "Of those that remain, they are 100 percent mentally
resigned, although they physically remain in the classroom. That
is a dangerous situation for any profession."
While Zimbabwe used to
be known as the breadbasket of Africa, its economy has declined
dramatically over the past decade. Inflation has rocketed, unemployment
has reached 80 percent of the workforce and 45 percent of the population
are undernourished because of food shortages.
Maureen Kademaunga,
a gender and human rights officer with the Zimbabwe
National Students Union, said demonstrations by students have
been brutally attacked. In one instance last month a woman who was
nine months pregnant was beaten up.
All universities in the
country are now closed and are not due to reopen until after the
elections. In effect, this has disenfranchised students, particularly
those from rural areas who have returned to their families. Zimbabwe
only allows people to vote in areas where they are registered, but
Kademaunga said that poverty means students often cannot afford
to travel.
Dewa Mavhinga, a human
rights lawyer, argued that food aid, on which four million Zimbabweans
(in a population of 12.5 million) are dependent, is being used as
a political weapon. In rural areas, the ZANU-PF has taken charge
of food delivery and has been accused of denying vital supplies
to those it views as opponents.
A spokesman for Zimbabwe's
embassy in Brussels said he had taken note of the EU's statement
this week, but refused to comment further.
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