| |
Back to Index
SADC: Urgently deploy GPA monitors to Zimbabwe
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
November 23, 2010
On November
22, 2010, a delegation from the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition held
a positive and progressive meeting with the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) Secretariat Executive Secretary, Dr. Tomaz A. Salomao
in Gaborone, Botswana. The meeting focused on SADC's role
in efforts to find a lasting solution to Zimbabwe's political
conflict and clarify the sub-regional position on elections and
the lifespan of the coalition government as the guarantors of the
Global Political Agreement
between. We acknowledge and appreciate this valuable engagement
with Dr. Salomao and his team and look forward to continued engagement.
We wish to reiterate our call to action for SADC to urgently:
- Deploy SADC
monitors to Zimbabwe to comprehensively assess and ensure the
full implementation of the Global Political Agreement (GPA) for
restoration of political stability, peace and human security paving
the way for Zimbabwe to hold credible elections;
- Ensure that
the SADC Monitors particularly focus on pushing the political
parties in Zimbabwe to create a conducive environment for the
holding of democratic elections that are free from violence and
intimidation and where the people of Zimbabwe can genuinely and
freely express their will;
- Indicate
categorically that elections will only be held after SADC and
the African Union - as guarantors of the GPA - make an independent
assessment of conditions on the ground and certify that the environment
is conducive and that necessary institutional and legislative
reforms have taken place to allow for an election that meets SADC
standards on the conduct of democratic elections. This includes
ensuring that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
(ZEC) is fully capable (technically and financially) of managing
and delivering a convincing election which will lead to a peaceful
transfer of power; that there is a clean and updated voters'
roll whose compilation should be the responsibility of ZEC and
not the partisan Registrar-General; that Zimbabweans in the Diaspora
have a right to vote; and that soldiers return to the barracks
and play no part in electoral affairs;
- Provide
for SADC, AU and UN election monitors to be deployed to Zimbabwe
at least six months before any election is held and to maintain
such monitors for at least another three months after the conclusion
of elections in order to prevent violence and intimidation and;
- Push the
political principals in Zimbabwe to genuinely commit to finding
a lasting solution to the political conflict thereby creating
fertile conditions for economic and social development. Without
a solid foundation of political stability and peace, any improvements
in the economy will not be sustainable;
- That all
the parties should agree on regional and international observers
that should be invited to monitor the elections. The minister
of Foreign affairs should only invite foreign observers that have
been agreed to by all the parties represented in the coalition
government.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe 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.
TOP
|