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Zimbabweans
appeal on film to South African leaders for urgent, decisive action
CIVICUS
January
08, 2009
http://www.civicus.org/component/content/935?task=view
Citizens of Zimbabwe
have issued an urgent appeal to the South African leaders to alleviate
their misery. Their anguished voices have been caught on film by
a three-member team from CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation,
which visited Zimbabwe over the Christmas period (19-26 December,
2008).
CIVICUS is an alliance
of international civil society organisations with members in 109
countries including many across Africa. The mission aimed to express
solidarity with civil society in Zimbabwe which is subjected to
severe repression, and to authenticate reports of breakdown of the
rule of law and governance structures in the country.
A key observation during
the trip was the disillusionment with the mediation efforts of the
South African government and Southern African Development Community
(SADC). The team discovered a pervasive feeling that SADC and the
South African government have not done enough to pressure the 'government'
in Zimbabwe to restore democracy and constitutional order.
These and other sentiments
of the people in Zimbabwe are part of a film 'Time 2 Act'
which will be distributed to the Presidents of South Africa, the
SADC, the AU and the ANC. The film contains interviews with church
leaders, trade union representatives, community workers, human rights
lawyers, NGO activists and ordinary men, women and children in Bulawayo,
Harare and Gweru.
Observing the total governance
and economic collapse in the country, Kumi Naidoo, Honorary President
of CIVICUS and co-chair, Global Call to Action Against Poverty,
a member of the team that visited Zimbabwe, noted that,"The
situation in Zimbabwe is much worse than what is believed by Africans
and citizens around the world alike. It has been a bleak Christmas,
characterised by despair, desperation and destitution with a particularly
devastating impact for women and children." This includes
not only the escalating health crisis with the spread of cholera
and mass starvation, but the crackdown on basic freedoms and the
breakdown of governance structures in the country - exemplified
by the abductions and intimidation tactics targeting civil society
and political activists, including Jestina Mukoko and her colleagues
from the Zimbabwe Peace Project.
The CIVICUS film documents
how the courage and zeal of Zimbabwean civil society remains alive,
at great peril to the lives of the men and women who work and volunteer
with civil society organisations. Ingrid Srinath, Secretary General
of CIVICUS warns, "The failure of Southern Africa's
leaders to fulfil their political and ethical responsibilities is
exacerbating the humanitarian crisis and the total breakdown of
state structures and governance in Zimbabwe. Through their inertia
they are complicit in the systemic abuse of human and democratic
rights of the people of Zimbabwe, and will, if unaddressed, cause
widespread instability across the region."
CIVICUS joins the voices
of civil society in Zimbabwe in urging the South African Government,
SADC and African civil society to immediately step up pressure to
restore democracy and the rule of law in Zimbabwe. On 7 January,
CIVICUS convened a meeting of civil society representatives including
Zimbabwean groups and South African groups who have been working
on Zimbabwean issues, to agree on coordinated action.
"This
report from the Zimbabwe mission raises issues of utmost concern,
and it is clear that there must be a new political impetus to break
the current deadlock," said Mary Robinson, former UN Commissioner
for Human Rights and a member of The Elders. Archbishop Desmond
Tutu is among the prominent civil society leaders who have pledged
their active support to the initiative. In a message to CIVICUS,
he said, "As the world's eye turns to the mass killings in
Gaza, we must not ignore the ongoing deaths in Zimbabwe -- not with
bombs, but with starvation, disease and apathy. These deaths are
no less deliberate than those perpetuated with arms."
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