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Zimbabwe Hijacks SADC - Response to the SADC Communique
Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition
April 09, 2003
Read
the Organ on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation's Communique
Read the Extended Response to the
SADC Communiqué by Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
The Southern African
Development Community (SADC) Organ on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation
issued a Communiqué following their meeting in Harare, Zimbabwe,
on 3 April 2003.
This Communiqué
identifies the land issue as at the core of the current Zimbabwe crisis,
and discusses the questions of farm workers, media restrictions, and non-violent
demonstrations as peripheral issues further affecting Zimbabwe. Finally,
the communiqué labels as a "selective diversion" attempts
to focus any discussion on governance and human rights issues.
This Communiqué
demonstrates a painful failure of SADC Heads of State to grasp issues
essential to the Zimbabwean people. All Zimbabweans believe in the principle
of a transparent and equitable land redistribution programme. In this
land reform exercise, however, there should be no bargaining with human
rights and the rule of law. These issues must be addressed together, through
an organised and through agrarian reform programme. Instead, the manner
in which Zimbabwe's land reform exercise has been carried out has resulted
in wide spread food shortages, growing famine, and has contributed to
an economic crisis that threatens not only Zimbabwe but the region. In
spite of this, the Government of Zimbabwe has managed to generate a highly
politicised debate around the land question. This debate obfuscates legitimate
concerns surrounding violence and human rights abuses, and distracts attention
of the international community, and Southern Africa in particular, from
the poor governance record of Zanu PF.
The Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition urges South Africans, and others in the region, to look beyond
the ruling party propaganda. Human rights and good governance are not
"distractions;" they are essential to the concerns of all Zimbabweans.
A well heeded two-day stay-away, and by-election victories by the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) last month have been met by a wave
of violence and repression. Over 600 pro-democracy activists, including
civic leaders, councillors and opposition Members of Parliament have been
arrested in the past two weeks under spurious charges. Over 800 people,
primarily activists, but also their neighbours, colleagues, husbands,
wives and children have been beaten, tortured, raped assaulted and victimised
over the past two weeks for involvement-or perceived involvement-with
the democratic struggle.
A SADC task force
which was to come to Zimbabwe this week to investigate the situation here
and to consult with key stakeholders has not yet arrived. Reports indicate
that the entire Task Force process may be hijacked by the Government of
Zimbabwe, which seeks to set the agenda, determine the itinerary and identify
the "stake holders" to be consulted, if and when the task force
arrives.
The Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition is stunned by the capacity of thirteen capable governments to
be so completely hoodwinked by one country's President. It urges the governments
of SADC and concerned citizens across the region to go beyond the propaganda
put forth by the ruling party in Zimbabwe, and develop their own understanding
of the severity of the Zimbabwe situation by listening to and engaging
with voices from all corners of Zimbabwe.
Crisis in Zimbabwe
is a grouping of civil society organisations and coalitions whose vision
is a democratic Zimbabwe. The Coalition's mandate is to address the twin
questions of governance and legitimacy.
Visit the Crisis in
Zimbabwe Coalition fact
sheet
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