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Zimbabwe's upcoming elections threaten another campaign of rape
AIDS
Free World
July 21, 2010
AIDS-Free World calls
urgently for international action to prevent the looming carnage
in Zimbabwe. The United Nations Security Council must take the lead
in confronting President Robert Mugabe. If it does not, the next
presidential election period, quite likely in 2011, will condemn
the women of Zimbabwe to a grisly repeat of the politically motivated
rape campaign orchestrated by Mugabe during the 2008 elections.
We also call upon the
AIDS movement to use its considerable weight and incorporate this
issue into its agenda. As a first step, we urge the AIDS and human
rights community to attend a regional conference we plan to hold
in Africa to find strategies for legal accountability for international
crimes of sexual violence on the continent.
AIDS activists have shown
that they can be a powerful force for change. As people with a deep
commitment to human rights, AIDS activists have both moral and practical
reasons to help stop state-sponsored sexual crimes. Protecting those
who are exposed to human rights violations that put them at risk
of HIV is a crucial part of HIV prevention. Fighting impunity for
sexual crimes is essential to preventing further spread of the pandemic.
AIDS-Free World
began its work on political rape immediately after the bloody 2008
elections in Zimbabwe. For the next year and a half, we visited
southern Africa with teams of international lawyers and interviewed
70 rape victims, collecting over 300 hours of testimony detailing
380 total acts of rape. In December 2009, we released our report,
Electing to Rape: Sexual
Terror in Mugabe's Zimbabwe, in Johannesburg. The report presents
compelling evidence that the rapes were crimes against humanity
under international law; that the campaign was effective in terrorizing
communities and winning the election for ZANU-PF; that it was widespread
and systematic; and that it will happen again unless Mugabe is stopped.
Our report of devastating
accounts of humiliation, pain and degradation was widely covered
in the media, yet the government of Zimbabwe simply ignored the
charges. Other lawyers in Africa have corroborated, through separate
interviews, the irrefutable evidence we provided, yet the institutional
regional response has been no better: neither the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) nor the African Union took note of
these crimes, much less action to seek accountability. The next
SADC meeting is scheduled to take place in Windhoek in mid-August,
and Zimbabwe should be a priority on the agenda. The next AU Summit
is at the end of this month; they, too, should take action. Intense
pressure from SADC and the AU could bring Mugabe to his knees. It
is unacceptable for the African community, knowing full well what
has happened and will happen in Zimbabwe, to stand by passively
as Mugabe gears up for another campaign of rape and terror to hold
onto power. This time, the international community has advance notice.
This time, we will all be responsible if the atrocities are repeated.
AIDS-Free World continues
to advocate for action at the highest levels of international organizations.
Next month we will speak with officials of the International Criminal
Court. We are exploring the possibility of litigation in African
courts as one strategy to end impunity for rapists involved in crimes
against humanity. We continue to point out that international resolutions
created to protect women in conflict -- Resolutions 1325, 1820 and
1888, which deal with sexual violence and the peace process -- have
done nothing for the women of Zimbabwe.
In the months after their
brutal rapes, 37 percent of the women we interviewed tested positive
for HIV. Whether or not they acquired HIV from their rapists, the
consequent trauma and displacement put their health and treatment
in jeopardy. The culture of impunity in Zimbabwe, so entrenched
that the actions of the president himself promote rape as an effective
political strategy, helps spread HIV. In their sworn affidavits,
several women reported that the men who raped them specifically
threatened them with HIV. One woman quoted her rapist as saying,
"We have hurt you. So go get tested because we have given you
the prize for what you were doing."
The UN Security Council
is often fearful of prejudging. It tends to wait until a crisis
is fullblown before it acts. In the case of Zimbabwe, the writing
is on the wall: Mugabe and ZANU-PF supporters are prepared to do
whatever it takes to win the next elections. According to local
accounts, they are already reactivating the torture and rape camps
in Zimbabwe and ensuring that the infrastructure is in place to
hurt the opposition again.
And after the next campaign,
more women will flee the country, heading for even more danger -
violence and xenophobia in neighboring South Africa and Botswana.
The United Nations can
choose to wait and count the number of women raped, the number of
new HIV cases, and the number of tortured bodies, or it can choose
to act now. In conjunction with SADC and the AU, the Security Council
can finally give life to the principle of "Responsibility to
Protect" and apply it to Zimbabwe. Neighboring countries can
either utilize their courts to prosecute Zimbabwean perpetrators,
where possible, or revise their national legislation to make such
domestic prosecutions of international crimes viable.
The AIDS movement,
too, must act. If we do not, we are complicit. We must recognize
the plight of Zimbabwe's women for what it is - an imminently desperate
situation of fundamental relevance to human rights and the fight
against HIV - and speak out in support of accountability for heinous
past crimes, and prevention of future rapes.
CONTACT:
Julia Greenberg,
jg@aidsfreeworld.org or
in the Media Centre
Local cell: +43 (0) 650 480 7308 International cell: +1 (347) 564
8935
Christina Magill, clm@aidsfreeworld.org
Local cell: +43 (0) 650 721 6406 International cell: +1 (647) 242
4460
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