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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe:
Withdrawal of EU observers may send the wrong signal, encourage
further violations
AI Index
AFR 46/011/2002 - News Service Nr. 30
Amnesty International
February 19, 2002
Zimbabwe: Withdrawal
of EU observers may send the wrong signal, encourage further violations
The withdrawal of the European Union's (EU) election observers deepens
Amnesty International's concerns that human rights violations orchestrated
by the ruling party in the run-up to the presidential elections
will escalate unchecked by impartial international eyewitnesses.
"It is alarming that the largest contingent of international observers
will not be on the ground during these crucial days leading up to
the election. By their very presence they acted as a check to state-sponsored
violence and intimidation occurring on a daily basis," Amnesty International
said.
"The lack of impartial international observers will facilitate further
suppression of the rights to freedom of expression."
The human rights organization appealed to the other remaining observation
teams from the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Parliamentary
Forum, the Commonwealth and the Organization of African Unity to
send a larger number of observers to make up for the absence of
the EU. Some 30 EU observers had been accredited to judge the fairness
of the 9 to 10 March presidential election, with another 120 due
in the week before the balloting.
"The decision to withdraw EU observers will give the green light
for further serious human rights violations in Zimbabwe," the organization
added.
In the run-up to the elections, professional policing has been undermined
by political instructions. Eyewitnesses described to Amnesty International
how some 400 marching supporters of the ruling party were escorted
by police yesterday into the downtown capital city of Harare from
the University of Zimbabwe. The demonstrators subsequently stormed
into the Harare headquarters of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), assaulted the occupants with stones and broke the
windows of the building. Several people were reportedly injured.
Riot police, seen by MDC staff members from their vantage point
in the building, remained nearby but did not intervene during the
15-minute incident. Amnesty International has learned that after
the mob assaulted MDC staff members and passersby, riot police then
moved in to further assault the victims of the attack. The police
reportedly fired five to six tear gas cannisters into the lobby
of the building, then chased and assaulted MDC staff members as
they fled out the front door. This attack was apparently facilitated
by the police mis-using authority granted to them by the newly promulgated
Public Order and Security Act (POSA).
"Yesterday's attack on the MDC staff members in Harare exemplifies
the pattern in which partisan policing is is involved in assaults
on opposition supporters by ruling party militia or arbitrary arrests
by
police officers," Amnesty International said.
During the past two weeks, Amnesty International has documented
other grave violations of the right to public assembly and association,
which the organization believes were facilitated by the lack of
international observers. These include:
Some 11 church leaders were arrested on 16 February for an inter-denominational
event in Bulawayo. Police officials claimed that the march by Roman
Catholic, Anglican, Presbyterian, and Methodist
churches would endanger public order or breach the peace. At the
end of the second service, police arrested Anglican Reverend Noel
Scott at his pulpit on charges that he violated the POSA. Other
leading clergy and worshippers followed police who had detained
Rev. Scott, to the central police station of Bulawayo, where they
prayed outside the police station. Another 10 people, including
Catholic priest Father Kevin O'Doherty were also arrested and charged
under the POSA, and were later released on remand on 18 February.
Police arrested some 15 members of the National Constitutional Assembly
(NCA) on 15 February for taking part in a peaceful demonstration
that had been banned by police under the POSA. Several of those
arrested alleged that they had been assaulted by police while in
custody.
On 10 February, Zimbabwean police cancelled a rally in Gokwe by
MDC presidential candidate Morgan Tsvangirai, stating that the rally
would be likely to degenerate into violence and was therefore banned
under the POSA. Yet police did not intervene when ZANU-PF attacked
the rally organizers on 9 February and burned their vehicle.
Some 60 independent and foreign journalists demonstrated outside
of parliament on 30 January, leading to the arrest of three journalists.
Charges against them, were later dropped when the protest was deemed
by authorities to be a "professional meeting".
Amnesty International believes that inaction or use of excessive
force by police violates international standards for policing. Despite
the POSA stating that only force that is reasonably justifiable
in the
circumstances can be used, other provisions of the law endanger
the right to freedom of expression.
Background:
The expulsion of Pierre Schori, Swedish ambassador to the United
Nations and the head of the EU's observation mission, on 16 February
appears to have triggered yesterday's EU decision to immediately
implement sanctions previously approved by the General Affairs Council
on January 28. The limited sanctions include a travel ban on President
Robert Mugabe and his close political associates, as well as a freeze
on overseas assets. The organization understands that Schori was
forced to leave Harare on 16 February after his visa was revoked
by Zimbabwean authorities.
For more information on Zimbabwe, please visit:
http://www.web.amnesty.org/mavp/av.nsf/pages/zimbabwe_at_risk
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
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.
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