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Zimbabwe:
Human Rights Watch criticises lack of action on Zimbabwe
IRIN News
April 28, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=33731
JOHANNESBURG
- Human Rights Watch
has criticised the lack of action by the UN Commission on Human
Rights regarding alleged abuses in Zimbabwe.
The rights group
issued a statement at
the end of the commission's meeting in Geneva last week.
The Zimbabwe
Media Monitoring Project reported that the official The Herald newspaper
"celebrated Zimbabwe's escape from criticism" at the meeting
which ended on Friday 25 April, while reports in the private press
"indicated that human rights abuses in the country were as
bad as ever".
Human Rights
Watch criticised the United States and the European Union for not
being firm enough about resolutions concerning the situation in
Zimbabwe.
"Resolutions
on Russia, Zimbabwe and Sudan were all less critical than in previous
years and ultimately were defeated," Human Rights Watch said.
The rights group
added that "a powerful grouping of hostile governments [which
had] joined the commission in recent years, including Algeria, Libya
... and Zimbabwe, joined with China, Cuba and Russia to oppose several
important country initiatives".
While "African
governments, led by South Africa, worked as a bloc to oppose scrutiny
of the human rights situation in Zimbabwe".
The Media Monitoring
Project said "the success in Geneva of the South African-sponsored
'no-action' resolution that saved Zimbabwe from a United States
and European Union motion condemning the country's human rights
record, had given the state-controlled media an excuse to ignore
the evidence of on-going strife suffered by the country's civilian
population".
"But it
did not explain why the privately owned press all ignored South
Africa's defence of the indefensible and the discreditable outcome
of the commission's vote," the media watchdog added.
Meanwhile, with
elections for commission membership set to be held this week in
New York, Human Rights Watch has argued that, as a prerequisite
for membership of the commission, governments should have: ratified
core human rights treaties; complied with their reporting obligations;
issued open invitations to UN human rights experts to visit their
countries; and not have been condemned recently by the commission
for human rights violations.
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