| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe: SADC's "Quiet Diplomacy" should not be silent acquiescence in
human rights violations
AI
Index AFR 46/002/2002 - News Service Nr. 8
Amnesty International
January 15, 2002
Zimbabwe's trail of
broken human rights promises should make members of the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) wary of taking at face value the commitments
made at the organisation's 14 January Extraordinary Summit in Malawi,
Amnesty International said today.
"'Quiet diplomacy' should not become silent acquiescence to continuing
gross human rights violations in Zimbabwe," Amnesty International said.
"President Robert Mugabe has made promises of human rights reforms to
the Commonwealth, to the European Union (EU) and now to SADC - but there
is no sign that the war of killings, torture and intimidation against
the political opposition is slowing. Will SADC verify the promises they
have received - and if so, how?"
SADC's final communiqué from the Summit listed human rights undertakings
pledged by Zimbabwe, including full respect for human rights, commitments
to freedom of expression and to independence of the judiciary, and agreement
to accredit a range of national monitors and international observers.
Yet at the same time as President Robert Mugabe was in Malawi making these
promises of improved human rights to the Southern African heads of state,
his political party and its militia - the "war veterans" - attempted the
murder of David Mpala, a member of Parliament of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC), and several opposition activists.
On Sunday 13 January 2002, some 20 members of the government-sponsored
militia of "war veterans" and ZANU-PF supporters abducted Mr. David Mpala
in broad daylight in the downtown of Lupane, in Matabeleland. His kidnappers
slashed him with knives and dumped him outside of town. Police have reportedly
arrested 11 suspects in connection with the incident.
One day earlier, more than 70 ruling party supporters wearing ZANU-PF
t-shirts attacked an MDC office in Murambinda, hacking and stabbing seven
suspected MDC supporters, two of whom had to be hospitalized with serious
injuries.
Zimbabwe had also promised the European Union on Friday 11 January 2002,
during talks under Article 96 of the Cotonou agreement, to allow observers
into the country, and stated that they would shortly issue invitations.
Amnesty International notes that the EU has requested access for international
election observers a full six weeks before the presidential election in
Zimbabwe. That would mean that the EU team should be deployed into Zimbabwe
by the end of next week.The human rights organization sincerely hopes
that Zimbabwe will honour that undertaking, but urges the EU to monitor
the deadline closely and require that the deployment begin immediately
as part of the Zimbabweans' response to the EU.
"SADC, the EU and the Commonwealth should insist that observers, monitors,
and human rights fact-finders must be deployed by next weekend at the
latest, because now - and no later - is the time to verify the situation
on the ground," the organization said.
Amnesty International also noted that when in September 2001, Zimbabwe
had pledged to the Commonwealth in Abuja, Nigeria, to restore the rule
of law in its country, those promises were soon broken. Indeed, Zimbabwe
appeared to increase the state-sponsored violence after the Abuja agreement,
including through the deployment of further military-trained militias
under the guise of a Youth Service. President Mugabe seems sure that the
Commonwealth will neither properly monitor nor take effective action with
regard to these broken promises. Instead, the Commonwealth should insist
that its Ministerial Action Group - blocked from visiting the country
- be allowed in.
"The commitments made at the SADC Summit risk becoming another set of
empty promises", Amnesty International said. "SADC should indicate how
it will ensure there is independent monitoring of action taken by President
Mugabe to meet his commitments made in Malawi. SADC should also demand
that Zimbabwe invite the United Nations' Special Rapporteurs on human
rights as independent investigators of allegations of political killings,
torture, threats to journalists and subversion of the judiciary."
Although President Mugabe also pledged his commitment to freedom of expression
and to allow freedom both domestic and international journalists to operate,
Amnesty International questioned the adoption of new laws that will restrict
freedom of expression. The passage last week of the Public Order and Security
Act criminalizes non-violent political protest, and metes out prison sentences
to those "insulting the president" or "disturbing the peace".
"The whole world has watched as one inter-governmental body after another
have wrung promises of reform from Zimbabwe while at the same time the
government condones Zimbabweans being killed, 'disappeared' and tortured,"
Amnesty International said. "Pressure to stop state-sponsored violence
in Zimbabwe, exerted by African and European governments does not undermine
Zimbabwe's sovereignty, but reaffirms the standards that all states must
uphold to be members of the international community of nations," Amnesty
International said.
Background
An excerpt from the text of the SADC summit communiqué pertaining
to Zimbabwe:
"Summit welcomed the following actions to be undertaken by Zimbabwe: full
respect for human rights, including the right to freedom of opinion, association
and peaceful assembly for all individuals; the commitment to investigate
fully and impartially all cases of alleged political violence in 2001
and action to do so; a Zimbabwean Electoral Supervisory Commission which
is adequately resourced and able to operate independently, the accreditation
and registration of national independent monitors in good time for the
elections; a timely invitation to, and accreditation of a wide range of
international election observers; commitment to freedom of expression
as guaranteed by the constitution of Zimbabwe; reaffirmation by Zimbabwe
of its practice of allowing national and international journalists to
cover important national events, including elections, on the basis of
its laws and regulations; commitment by the government of Zimbabwe to
the independence of the judiciary and to the rule of law; and the transfer
by the government of Zimbabwe of occupiers of non-designated farms to
legally acquired land".
The above list of actions to be taken by the Zimbabwe authorities was
lifted verbatim from the communique of the EU's meeting with Zimbabwe
of 11 January 2002. In its communique the EU noted that the Zimbabwean
Authorities had expressed a willingness "to go some way towards meeting
the EU's concerns with concrete actions" on these points, but stressed
that "at this stage it is not satisfied that these concerns will be met."
For more information please call:
- Samkelo Mokhine,
press officer, Amnesty International-South Africa, on + 27 83 261 2656
and/or
- Amnesty International's
press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566
Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW
- Website : http://www.amnesty.org
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
|