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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe: Baseless allegations against civil society are an open invitation
to attack them
AI
Index AFR 46/003/2002 - News Service Nr. 12
Amnesty International
January 21, 2002
Baseless allegations
against a human rights organization printed in Zimbabwe's state-controlled
daily newspaper signal the newest phase in the government's campaign to
undermine civil society, Amnesty International said today.
On 17 and 18 January 2002, the Zimbabwe Herald newspaper alleged that
Amani Trust has been "funding covert operations against Zimbabwe African
National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF)"; that it is financially linked
to the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and that its assistance
to the victims of political violence is actually a means of carrying out
torture.
"This is a contemptible twisting of facts -- to describe an organization
assisting victims of torture as perpetrating torture," Amnesty International
said. "We unreservedly condemn the campaign of slander that attempts to
portray Amani Trust or other human rights organizations as politically
motivated and involved in political violence. We are concerned that this
gives a green light to state-sponsored militia to perpetrate violence
against human rights defenders."
Amani Trust, a leading human rights organization, began operations in
1994, and has worked consistently with victims of torture both from the
liberation war before 1980 and victims of the present political violence.
Attacks by the state-controlled media have often led to physical attacks
by ruling party supporters or to baseless, politically motivated arrests
by the Zimbabwe Republic Police.
For example, state-controlled newspapers, radio and TV have imputed terrorist
activities to MDC opposition members, who then became victims of human
rights violations, while ZANU-PF members in a majority of cases have been
perpetrators.
Amnesty International believes that these Herald articles have created
a public perception that heightens the threat of violence by ruling party
supporters against the human rights community, in a similar manner in
which the MDC and other opposition party activists have been assaulted
following articles in the state-run media.
"We are alarmed at the prospect that Amani would be targeted in the same
manner as Zimrights -- another leading human rights organization -- and
the way the independent press has currently been victimized," Amnesty
International said.
Amnesty International notes that UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's remarks
on 15 January 2002 which expressed concern about stifling of freedoms
of assembly, association and expression. It further welcomed UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights Mary Robinson's statement that immediate action is needed
in the "real human rights crisis", with "documented cases of rights abuses
against members of opposition groups, the independent media and human
rights organizations".
"Given the level of UN concern, and the commitment undertaken by President
Mugabe to undertake full and impartial investigations of allegations of
political violence, it is imperative for the president to extend an invitation
to the UN Special Rapporteurs working with Commissioner Mary Robinson
to conduct investigations into the freedom of the press, torture, political
killings and the independence of the judiciary," Amnesty International
said.
For more information
please call:
- 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
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