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Zimbabwe and SADC - Setting the Record Straight
Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition
April 15, 2003
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Read
the Organ on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation's Communique
Read the Initial Response to the
SADC Communiqué by Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
Extended Response
to the SADC Communiqué
1. Introduction
The Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition read with dismay the communiqué issued by
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) on April 3, 2003 following
the Third Session of the Committee of Ministers of the Organ on Politics,
Defence and Security Cooperation.
Sections 8-12 of the
Communiqué deal specifically with Zimbabwe, and present a disappointing
indication that SADC leaders continue to be misled by government propaganda
which paints the Zimbabwe question solely as a struggle with colonial
roots in which the land question plays a leading role, and concerns over
poor governance and human rights abuses present a "selective diversion"
from the central issue of redistribution of land.
The Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition commends SADC leaders for acknowledging the seriousness of the
Zimbabwe question by endorsing a task force mission to investigate the
situation on the ground and consult not only with government actors but
with opposition members and civil society groups. The Coalition notes
with dismay, however, indications that this task force mission will be
not only postponed, but possibly hijacked by Zimbabwe's ruling party,
and used as one more attempt at window dressing real problems by directing
observers to the "safe" sources and restricting their ability
to move freely, discuss a range of issues, and meet a variety of stake
holders in Zimbabwe's democratic process. The Coalition calls on SADC
governments to maintain their principles and to commit to good governance,
democracy, and human rights. It urges SADC heads of state to resist attempts
by the Zimbabwe government to make a mockery of legitimate debate, and
instead engage with Zimbabweans in genuine debate.
The Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition reiterates the essential point that the question of mounting
human rights abuses represent far more than a distraction from the key
concerns of the Zimbabwe people. Instead, the Coalition argues that issues
like land and compensation are only part of the problem, which must be
linked to other central issues such as economic decline, gross human rights
violations and political illegitimacy.
2. Issues raised
in the Communiqué
In an effort to clarify the reality of the situation in Zimbabwe, the
Coalition makes the following points:
2.1 Stay away
On the question of the stay away, the Communiqué manifests the
extent to which it has fallen prey to Zanu PF's logic of paranoia. The
Communiqué glibly refers to Foreign Affairs Minister Stan Mudenge's
assurance that the laws of Zimbabwe guarantee the right of individuals
to demonstrate freely and peacefully. It fails to mention the fact that
in reality, the laws of Zimbabwe are regularly amended in order to progressively
narrow the legal opportunities open to Zimbabweans for public demonstration.
Again, the Communiqué's silence on legislation such as POSA underlines
the complicity of SADC member states in ignoring the governance question
and putting all their faith in the assertions of an unpopular leader and
his Government.
In reality, the two-day
stay away caused a national shut down, and was largely peaceful. While
there were isolated reports of violence and sabotage by unknown agents,
March 18 and 19 were quiet, with the vast majority of businesses closed
and people in their homes. It was on the evening of March 19, and in the
ensuing few weeks that the situation in Zimbabwe has become even more
violent than in the past. In other words, it is the retributive attacks
by state agents in the fall out after the stay away which has been violent,
far more so than the stay away days themselves were . Over 600 pro-democracy
activists, including civic leaders, councillors and opposition Members
of Parliament and national leaders 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.
This violence has been perpetrated primarily by individuals in police
and military uniforms.
2.2 Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA)
Section 10 of the SADC Communiqué refers to the need to amend the
Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA). SADC is to
be commended for acknowledging the negative effects of legislation such
as AIPPA on the capacity of Zimbabweans to exercise their Constitutional
freedom of expression. However, the Communiqué falls short of achieving
useful action in several ways.
In fact most of the
proposed amendments will worsen rather than improve the situation as regards
freedom of expression . The proposed amendments give broad and sweeping
definitions for words and phrases and this provides the Ministry of Information
in the President's Office with even greater ambit to use the legislation
as a weapon against certain sectors of the media. The original Act was
clearly intended to give the Zimbabwean Government far-reaching powers
to clamp down on the non-government press. The key institution of control
in the Act is the Media and Information Commission. This body wields enormous
powers over the media. No media institution can operate unless it is registered
by the Commission and no media practitioner can practise as a journalist
without accreditation from the Commission. It is a serious criminal offence
for a newspaper to operate without being registered or a journalist to
operate without accreditation. The Commission is also to create and implement
a code of conduct. For a serious breach of this code, the Commission can
remove the journalist's accreditation. The Act also contains a whole variety
of nebulous criminal offences that can be brought against journalists.
Many journalists have been arrested and prosecuted for these offences
. The police apply these provisions in a completely partisan fashion to
harass journalists from the private press.
One of the amendments
to AIPPA involves a drastic restructuring of the Media and Information
Commission. It removes the provision that an association of journalists
and an association of media houses will nominate at least three of the
five to seven members Commission. This is contrary to an undertaking previously
given to the media and denies media practitioners the capacity to choose
any representatives to sit on the body. The end result of this amendment
is that the body that will regulate the media will now consist entirely
of Ministerial appointees. The Minister who exercises these powers has
repeatedly evinced open hostility towards the private media in Zimbabwe.
Furthermore, the Communiqué
does not refer to an important issue on freedom of the media, that of
the electronic broadcasting in Zimbabwe. In 2000 the Zimbabwe Supreme
Court ruled that that the government's national monopoly on both television
and radio broadcasting was unconstitutional. Following this ruling, government
passed the Broadcasting Services Act. This purported to remove the government's
monopoly on electronic broadcasting but it is highly restrictive in its
terms and does little to open up the broadcasting arena. For example,
it would allow only one other national broadcaster to operate in addition
to the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation. No new broadcasting licences
have been granted since this legislation was passed, even for community
broadcasting. SADC task force visitors are invited to spend even one night
watching ZTV or listening to the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation news
programmes to gain an appreciation of just how partisan the national broadcaster
is.
In addition, the Communiqué
completely ignores the question of repressive legislation such as the
Public Order and Security Act (POSA). POSA re-introduces apartheid style
legislative requirements including the carrying of identification, gives
the police force tremendous powers to determine what public meetings may
or may not be held, and represents a threat to Zimbabweans' constitutional
freedoms of expression, assembly and movement . Over the past year, POSA
has been used to arrest and detain thousands of pro-democracy activists
in acts of harassment by the state. Many of those arrested have been ill-treated
whilst in custody. The police have applied the legislation in a politically
biased way to prevent activities which they perceive as "dissident,"
while freely allowing gatherings by supporters of the ruling party .
2.3 Farm Workers
The Communiqué rightly indicates the need to consider the impact
of the land resettlement exercise on the two million displaced farm workers
and their families. Long before the land resettlement programme began,
farm workers represented one of Zimbabwe's most marginalised populations.
The current exercise has only worsened that situation. Many of these workers
are now unemployed, homeless and destitute. There is apparently no government
policy which appropriately addresses the issue of farm worker resettlement
or compensation for workers who are forced out of their homes when a farm
is acquired .
Some of these workers
have been absorbed by the new farmers, and have been offered employment
on these farms. However, there is very little protection for these workers
in terms of minimum wage and living conditions. For example, in January
2003, the General Agricultural Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ)
which represents farm workers negotiated a wage increment for workers
across the board. This raised the minimum wage for farm workers to $9,500
per month. However, many new farmers are unable or unwilling to pay that
amount, and instead are paying workers as little as $3,000 per month-less
than what they earned before the wage negotiations. For its efforts, GAPWUZ
has been labelled as a "pro-opposition" union, and its movements
have been severely hampered in many provinces. Its offices in Kwekwe,
Midlands Province were raided in February this year, and its offices in
Chinhoyi, Mashonaland West Province were razed by fire last month. Meanwhile,
farm workers suffer as farm schools and clinics are not being maintained,
and many new farmers are demanding payment for water, electricity and
rental from the farm workers they employ. Thus farm workers live in desperate
conditions and are poorly protected by their employers, the state or their
union.
As correctly indicated
by the SADC Communiqué, many of the farm workers in question are
of Malawian, Mozambican, Zambian or other descent. Thus, when they are
displaced, there is no where else that they can go. Amendments to the
Citizenship Act in 2002 effectively rendered many of these workers and
their children-who were born in Zimbabwe but who had foreign parentage-stateless.
It is argued that proposed amendments to this Act will do little to redress
the situation for most farm workers . Moreover, these changes do not address
the damage which has already been done. Many farm workers have already
been through a difficult and costly process to resolve their citizenship
status. More than that, many of these farm workers were disenfranchised
by the Citizenship Act. This means that they were unable to vote in the
2002 Presidential Election. Amending the Act now will do nothing to return
this vote to them.
In addition, the questions
of employment, residence, food security, schooling and health care, to
name a few, remain pressing concerns of these displaced farm workers,
who have been doubly abandoned-first by the displaced farmer, and then
by the State. Thus, an analysis of the Land Reform Programme must also
examine the impact of the resettlement exercise on the most vulnerable
groups, including communal land dwellers, women, displaced farm workers,
migrant workers, AIDS orphans, the elderly and retired workers.
2.4 Fast Track
Land Resettlement
The Communiqué refers to a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) presented
to the Commercial Farmers Union (CFU) by the Ministry of Lands and Agriculture
in January this year for its review. The CFU responded to this document,
but its concerns have yet to be addressed by the Ministry of Lands and
Agriculture. Instead, the situation on the former commercial farms continues
to be tense.
The Fast Track Land
Resettlement exercise has left Zimbabwean agriculture-the backbone of
the country's economy-in shambles. Moreover, despite reports by government
that the Land Resettlement exercise was completed in August last year,
farms continue to be acquired, and commercial farmers continue to be evicted
from their farms. On March 21, 2003, government published, in accordance
with Chapter 20:10 of the Land Acquisition Act, a Preliminary Notice to
Acquire Land. This list consisted of 78 farms that may now be acquired
by government. This indicates that the legal apparatus of land acquisition
is ongoing. In addition, the violence which has characterised land acquisition
over the past three years continues. On Tuesday April 8, two farmers,
John Coast and Allen Parrson went to their farm in Karoi, Mashonaland
West, which had been resettled. Bearing a High Court Order allowing them
to recover farm equipment from the property, they were attacked by a group
who had settled on the farm. The two suffered extensive bruising and swelling,
and were taken to a nearby hospital for treatment . This behaviour is
indicative of the lawlessness which has come to characterise the entire
land resettlement exercise.
In truth, the land
resettlement programme has been anything but rational, equitable and transparent.
Reports from across the country indicate that prime parcels of land have
been allocated to Zanu PF stalwarts in an effort to reward party loyalty
. The agrarian reform, land redistribution and rural development programmes
which so urgently needed to ease the strain on the communal lands and
improve the living conditions for millions of poor Zimbabweans have not
even been planned, much less implemented. There is an urgent need for
a thorough and independent audit of the land reform programme, which must
examine land ownership and tenure patterns in a non-partisan and scientific
manner.
The violent and haphazard nature of the land reform exercise has plunged
Zimbabwe's economy into chaos. Effects of a regional drought have been
compounded by drastically reduced agricultural production. Over 7.2 million
Zimbabweans-more than half the population-are currently unable to meet
their basic nutritional requirements. Biting food shortages grip the country.
Queues for bread, mealie meal, sugar, cooking oil and other basic commodities
are commonplace in every urban centre and growth point. Poor rural women
and their children are the most affected by this situation. In the rural
areas, villagers are reduced to eating roots and foraging in the wild
for meagre sustenance for their families . In Zimbabwe, it is estimated
that over one third of the adult population is HIV positive. Good nutrition
is essential to maintaining good health, particularly for HIV infected
individuals. Thus, the impact of food shortages and poor nutrition are
compounded by high rates of HIV infection, jeopardising the futures of
millions of Zimbabweans.
3. Conclusion
As discussed,
the Communiqué from the Third Session of the Committee of Ministers
of the Organ on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation of SADC is
disappointing. It reveals a marked ignorance over essential issues facing
the broad generality of Zimbabweans today. These misconceptions, however,
can be corrected through continued engagement with a variety of Zimbabwean
actors, and through a concentrated effort to gain correct information
on current events in Zimbabwe. Thus, the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
commends SADC heads of state for seeking to engage in a task force process
designed to promote broad consultation with Zimbabweans, including civil
society organisations. The Coalition welcomes this effort, and hopes that
the task force will waste no time in coming to Zimbabwe to investigate
the situation here. Moreover, the Coalition sincerely hopes that SADC
is able to develop a non partisan programme of visits and consultations,
and spends a significant amount of time in the country, so that it is
able to move beyond the urban confines of Harare and gain a first hand
understanding of the reality in which most Zimbabweans live.
Visit the Crisis in
Zimbabwe Coalition fact
sheet
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