|
Back to Index
Crime
against humanity: the case for urgent action on Zimbabwe
Sokwanele
October 17, 2005
http://www.sokwanele.com/articles/sokwanele/crimeagainsthumanity_17oct2005.html
The potential
for mass starvation in Zimbabwe is now so real and close that Cardinal
Wilfred Napier, President of the Southern African Catholic Bishops'
Conference, and Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo have both, separately,
called on the United Nations' Security Council to take responsibility
for the crisis and act immediately.
They stress
that, if the organisation does not respond quickly and decisively
to ensure that food aid comes into the country and is distributed
fairly to all communities without political interference, it will
become complicit in the rapidly unfolding humanitarian disaster.
Cardinal Napier
joins his brother cleric of the Roman Catholic Church in Zimbabwe
and other regional church leaders in branding the Mugabe regime
guilty of a crime against humanity in relation to the politicization
of food, and in calling upon the international community to act.
Cardinal Napier
was part of a South African Council of Churches delegation which,
on visiting Zimbabwe in July to assess the scale of the humanitarian
crisis caused by Operation Murambatsvina, expressed shock and outrage.
Under the guise of restoring order, the government's controversial
operation to "Drive Out the Filth" destroyed the homes or jobs of
at least 700 000 people and the lives of 2.4 million others, affecting
almost a fifth of the population - currently estimated at 11 million.
The informal economy, which fed 40 percent of the people, was wrecked.
The International Crisis Group estimates that Zimbabwe's internal
refugee problem is between four and five million. A further 3,5
million people are estimated to have fled the country, mainly to
countries within the Southern African Development Community (SADC),
notably South Africa.
Also in July,
the Executive Council of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa
noted: "There is little doubt that we are witnessing a tragedy of
unprecedented enormity. We have on our hands a complete recipe for
genocide." They went on to urge the international community to act
"vigorously" to expose the tragedy of Zimbabwe.
Although the
international community has continued to drag its heels in this
regard, a mechanism by which it can take action is in fact available.
The Treaty of
Rome is the statute governing the International Criminal Court,
and Section 7 (2) (b) of that statute defines "extermination" (a
crime against humanity) as "the intentional infliction of conditions
of life, inter alia, the deprivation of access to food and medicine,
calculated to bring about the destruction of part of a population."
David Coltart,
secretary for legal affairs of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), has already said "there is no doubt … this regime
is guilty of constructive intent to deprive people of access to
food which will in turn destroy a part of the population." In a
letter to colleagues he wrote: "The Mugabe regime knows that its
brinkmanship with the UN and the WFP regarding the question of who
will distribute UN food … is delaying the supply of desperately
needed food aid. People are now starving, and no doubt many are
already dying as a result throughout the country." This he cited
as evidence of the regime's "gross negligence and callousness."
On June 30,
2005, James Morris, director of the World Food Program, said at
the United Nations that southern Africa was the world's gravest
crisis at present, and that Zimbabwe was the epicentre. The UN's
World Food Program lists the number of people in need of food aid
in Zimbabwe as between four and five million. The Mugabe regime
has consistently denied that the country faces food shortages and
has refused to appeal for help formally from the World Food Program.
The call by
church leaders for the United Nations to intervene swiftly to avert
a looming tragedy raises the issue of state sovereignty. Here it
is interesting to note that the World Summit held on September 14-16,
2005 in New York adopted the "International Responsibility to Protect"
doctrine. In terms of this doctrine the international community
has a responsibility to intervene in a country where genocide, ethnic
cleansing or crimes against humanity directed at the population
of that country are taking place. Accordingly one of the core principles
to which all UN Member States are now committed is that "where a
population is suffering serious harm, as a result of internal war,
insurgency, repression or state failure, and the state in question
is unwilling or unable to halt or avert it, the principle of non-intervention
yields to the international responsibility to protect."
Even against
President Mugabe's devious ways and continued intransigence there
is therefore a mechanism for the international community to act,
and to act decisively, to counter the threat of a major catastrophe
before it is played out in bitter tragedy.
As Namibia's
National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) executive director, Phil
ya Nangoloh, commented: "Leaders of dictatorial regimes out there
can no longer hide behind the so-called principle of non-interference
in the affairs of another state in order to get away with murder
with impunity."
Furthermore,
first among the elements of the "responsibility to protect" enshrined
in the UN doctrine is the "responsibility to prevent" - defined
as "to address both the root causes and direct causes of internal
conflict and other man-made crises putting populations at risk."
Archbishop Pius
Ncube has repeatedly warned the international community of the politicization
of the food issue by the ruling Zanu PF party, and of the tragic
consequences for the people of Zimbabwe.
The present
major food crisis began with the violent farm invasions orchestrated
by Mugabe in February 2000 after losing a referendum to change the
constitution and further entrench his power. Today this once highly
productive engine of the economy has been virtually destroyed. Prior
to the land invasions, the sector brought in about US$700 million
annually, but is now estimated to earn below US$200 million. Formerly
breadbasket of the region, the country has grappled with persistent
food shortages and serious levels of hunger since 2001. At the same
time, the Mugabe regime has achieved the dubious distinction of
presiding over the fastest-shrinking economy in the world.
Until now the
seriousness of the food crisis has been brought to world attention
by the opposition movement, civil society and the church. Surprisingly,
during the past month, the government's own agents have admitted
to the severity of the food crisis.
On September
8, 2005, Ministry of Agriculture permanent secretary Simon Pazvakavambwa
disclosed to the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries that the country
had only three weeks' supply of food left. "If for some reason imports
stop, we are finished…. and if we take too long (to import food),
there may be no food in many people's homes in the coming weeks,"
he told his stunned audience.
Pazvakavambwa
was immediately taken to task by State Security Minister Didymus
Mutasa and the Minister of Agriculture, Dr Joseph Made, for disclosing
"classified information". Mutasa said that the allegations were
baseless as the government was importing 15 000 tonnes of maize
each week from South Africa to feed the people.
Mutasa's figure
of 15 000 tonnes inadvertently lent credence to Pazvakavambwa's
revelations and revealed the gravity of the situation. The importation
of just 60 000 tonnes of maize each month represents a major shortfall
since the national requirement is more than 150 000 tonnes.
Zimbabwe needs
more than 1.8 million tonnes of maize to feed the nation until the
next harvest in May 2006, just seven months away. At the rate of
15 000 tonnes every week, it will take the government up to 30 months
to import the required amount.
The same week,
the state-owned Herald newspaper, which normally churns out government
propaganda, published the following warning: "Zimbabwe faces a serious
food deficit during the next farming season because of a severe
shortage of seed and fertilisers, coupled with poor planning and
management of the agricultural sector."
The article
continued: "So serious is the situation that some farming experts
told the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Lands and Agriculture
yesterday that even if the heavens opened up, no meaningful farming
would take place."
The catalogue
of failures in the agricultural sector reported to the Parliamentary
Committee makes dismal reading.
Producers of
seed, fertiliser, chemicals and farming equipment reported that
the country has minimal stocks of fertiliser and seed, while funding
was released late for the 2005-2006 agricultural season.
The same depressing
picture of chronic shortages of materials and foreign currency and
a lack of forward planning emerges across the whole range of agricultural
activities, from seed and fertilizer production to the provision
of tillage and irrigation equipment. For the first time in history,
the country has run out of 6mm discs. All this leaves an already
crisis-ridden Zimbabwe ill prepared for the next growing season.
Vice-President
of the Zimbabwe Farmers' Union (ZFU), Edward Raradza, said apart
from the poor preparations, 60 percent of funds allocated for farming
by the government did not reach the intended beneficiaries.
The Parliamentary
Committee's chairperson, Walter Mzembi, concluded that the information
and statistics presented to the committee pointed to a grim future.
"The information you have given us as a Parliamentary Committee
simply shows there is no season," he said.
This evidence
is supported by first-hand accounts from across the country of large
swaths of once-productive farmland now lying idle, with little sign
of the normal preparation of fields for planting ahead of the first
summer rains.
The end result
of the Mugabe regime's plundering of agricultural resources and
gross mismanagement of the economy is that today close to half of
the population is in urgent need of food aid, without which they
will quite simply starve. The 1,8 million tonnes of the staple food
required to see the country through to the next harvest is nowhere
in sight.
Recently a pro-government
newspaper reported that people were struggling to meet escalating
food costs, with a bucket of maize selling for between Z$150 000
and Z$200 000, far beyond the reach of many villagers in dire need
of food. Just this week Archbishop Pius Ncube spoke again of his
fears of "starvation by inflation" for those who could not afford
even the little food available.
On October 10,
2005 Mrs Justice Rita Makarau handed down her judgment in the case
of Elton Steers Mangoma v Didymus Mutasa in the MDC electoral challenge
for the Makoni North Constituency - case EP 12/05.
Although she
dismissed the application to set aside the election (because of
the excessive burden of proof now imposed on a losing candidate
by the new Electoral Act), page 23 of the judgment revealed the
following significant finding:
"I am satisfied
that throughout the constituency, villagers were threatened with
the withholding of food and other handouts and were denied these
if they supported the MDC. To borrow a phrase used by the petitioner
during his testimony, it was made clear to the villagers (that)
supporting the MDC meant going without food and other handouts.
In my view,
a graphic and rather sad example of how the villagers were made
to exchange their right to belong to a party of their choice for
food is afforded by the evidence of Mabvepi Mawanga who witnessed
a fellow MDC member exchanging his MDC T-shirt for a bag of food
at a public meeting. The other MDC members were then invited to
do likewise if they wanted the food handouts. This occurred in the
communal area. The practice of withholding food and agricultural
inputs was however not confined to one part of the constituency.
It was practiced in urban Headlands, in the resettlement areas and
in the communal areas.
The perpetrators
of this practice were the leadership of Zanu PF at the village levels
and the war veterans residing in the constituency."
It should be
noted that State Security Minister Didymus Mutasa is in charge of
food aid distribution. This month he announced the government was
holding back a decision on whether to invite international relief
agencies to help feed starving Zimbabweans until after the Senate
Election on November 26. In August 2002, Mutasa, then organisation
secretary for Zanu PF, said: "We would be better off with six million
people, with our own people who supported the liberation struggle",
which equated then to almost half of the population.
During the past
five years, the once resilient Zimbabweans have been subjected to
massive food shortages, the collapse of health care system and chronic
shortages of essential medicines. Thousands have been abused or
tortured by the regime and now live in abject poverty without access
to medical care. As a result of Operation Murambatsvina, hundreds
of thousands of Zimbabwe's most needy people are homeless.
It is estimated
that over 3,000 men, women and children die of AIDS related diseases
each week. Life expectancy in Zimbabwe has plummeted to just 33
years. The estimated 3,5 million refugees in neighbouring countries
face increasing levels of xenophobia and police victimisation while
struggling to survive themselves and still send food and money to
their families back home.
All this adds
up to a devastating indictment of the Mugabe regime. Leaving aside
for the time being the issue of accountability for crimes against
humanity perpetrated by the regime, the immediate priority has to
be the mounting of a massive humanitarian relief operation. The
scale and urgency of the crisis now facing between a third and half
of Zimbabwe's debilitated population requires a response which is
way beyond the resources and the proven limitations of Harare.
The case for
United Nations' intervention therefore is overwhelming - not on
Mr Mugabe's terms and according to his timetable, but as soon as
the UN can respond to prevent a catastrophe of major proportions.
The time has come for the international community to demand action.
Zimbabwe must be referred to the UN Security Council without delay.
Visit the Sokwanele
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
|