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UN Security Council must hold emergency session on Zim government's
rape campaign
AIDS-Free
World
December 05, 2008
AIDS-Free World has appealed
to the United Nations Security Council for an emergency session
on Zimbabwe in order to prevent President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF
party from waging a second campaign of rape and sexual torture in
order to crush political opposition and regain absolute power. The
full text of the letter to the 15 members of the Security Council
is attached and below:
Excellency;
We urge you and your
fellow United Nations Security Council members to hold an emergency
session immediately on the situation in Zimbabwe. Current events
in Zimbabwe combined with evidence we have gathered about recent
abuses indicate that a nationwide, orchestrated campaign of politically
motivated sexual violence and torture is imminent. Much of that
violence, particularly the sexual violence and torture experienced
by opposition supporters, has been largely hidden from world view.
Human rights lawyers from Zimbabwe report an increased crackdown
on human rights activists in the past several days. This surge in
political repression, combined with an escalating humanitarian crisis
which includes a cholera epidemic that has spread to other countries
in the region, require urgent and decisive action by the Council
to prevent the next wave of sexual and other violence.
The December
3rd abduction of prominent human rights activist Jestina Mukoko,
National Director of the Zimbabwe
Peace Project, is simply the most recent overt signal that government
operatives are gearing up once again to deploy the terrorist tactics
used so effectively to intimidate and silence Robert Mugabe's political
opponents throughout the Presidential election period earlier this
year. The Zimbabwe Peace Project has documented thousands of incidents
of violence and brutality carried out by men who were identified
by victims and eye-witnesses as government employees and ZANU-PF
loyalists. Ms. Mukoko represents a corps of Zimbabwean activists
who risk their lives daily in the pursuit of justice. Forcing her
from her home at gunpoint was tantamount to a declaration to women:
You will be silenced. Abducting such a well-known crusader -
much like denying a passport to the country's Prime Minister, and
denying visas to the former UN Secretary-General and his fellow
Elders - was a brazen declaration to the UN and the world
that the government of Zimbabwe is impervious to criticism.
Human rights
lawyers, activists, and doctors inside Zimbabwe informed AIDS-Free
World weeks ago, during our recent mission to Harare, that they
believe a resurgence of violence is imminent. We urge the Security
Council to heed these warnings. AIDS-Free World has documented firsthand
accounts of politically-related sexual violence against female opposition
party supporters that are chilling in their brutality and consistency.
Survivors of sexual violence have signed sworn affidavits, which
we intend to use in future legal proceedings, describing violent
sexual and physical assaults occurring during the election period
in Zimbabwe, from late March through June 2008. These assaults,
clearly meant to intimidate voters and destroy opposition to ZANU-PF,
were planned and executed systematically and efficiently from base
camps organized by ZANU-PF across the country. The survivors' accounts
further indicate that perpetrators in disparate locations across
the country followed similar patterns of verbal and physical abuse
and torture, including shouted threats articulating their intentions
to crush any hope of a government power-sharing arrangement,
and to reinstall ZANU-PF's absolute political power. The women's
testimonies also demonstrate that their attempts to report their
attacks to authorities were systematically thwarted by police and
government hospital personnel. We are informed by human rights lawyers
and doctors inside Zimbabwe that the infrastructure that facilitated
that violence is still in place, ready to be re-activated upon a
signal from ZANU-PF leaders.
We ask that
the Security Council take immediate measures to investigate credible
warnings from human rights activists in Zimbabwe who fear that the
government's declaration of a state of emergency today was a pretext
for imposing martial law and silencing political opponents once
and for all. The fact that some 100 health professionals demonstrating
for safe working conditions and back pay, as well as dozens of national
trade unionists protesting the government's inadequate reactions
to the country's humanitarian crises, were rounded up and jailed
at unknown locations during street protests on December 3rd is a
clear signal - far past the stage of "early warnings"
-- that mayhem is imminent, and the international community must
intervene. Added to these broadly repressive measures are other
indications that the government has now expanded its targets from
supporters of the Movement for Democratic Change to the broader
population: the seizure of Jestina Mukoko, whose abduction marks
the first time that a senior-level human rights activist has been
"disappeared", and the raiding of the Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights office in Bulawayo.
The acute vulnerability
of the women of Zimbabwe demands the Council's urgent attention.
Attempts to stifle information about the campaign of rape and sexual
violence that reached epidemic proportions across Zimbabwe during
the election period were appallingly successful. The women and girls
who survived those vicious, degrading attacks still bear open wounds,
and those who avoided assault have heard whispered accounts of the
savagery and live in mortal fear that they will be next. They await
the international community's intervention and protection.
Already, AIDS-Free World
has seen that rape survivors from the last wave of election-related
violence have had to travel to neighboring countries to seek medical
attention to be tested for HIV and treated for other injuries related
to sexual violence. The World Health Organization has confirmed
that the cholera epidemic originating in Harare has now spread to
South Africa and Botswana. The exact number of refugees fleeing
violence in Zimbabwe is unknown, but is estimated to be in the millions,
and undoubtedly, a new wave of violence will create another exodus.
Excellency, the daily
escalation of political repression combined with the disastrous
humanitarian situation make it imperative that the Security Council
immediately place on its agenda the threat that the crisis in Zimbabwe
poses to regional peace and security. We assure you of our most
respectful consideration, and anxiously await the decision of the
Council.
Yours sincerely,
Stephen Lewis
Co-Director, AIDS-Free
World
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