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Mugabe
plays Commonwealth race card
Amnesty International
October 09,
2003
Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe must not be allowed to deflect Commonwealth scrutiny
of his human rights record, Amnesty International's Commonwealth
Association said today.
There are reports
of a campaign initiated by President Mugabe to block the re-appointment
of New Zealander Don McKinnon as Commonwealth Secretary General
for alleged bias in his handling of Zimbabwe's suspension from the
intergovernmental body for violating its human rights principles.
President Mugabe has accused some Commonwealth governments of neo-colonialism
for criticising his human rights record.
"The record
of arbitrary arrests, unfair imprisonment, torture and impunity
in Zimbabwe speaks for itself, and black and white Zimbabweans are
entitled to protection," said AI's Commonwealth spokesperson,
Ced Simpson.
Failing to take
some sort of action against these violations of the Commonwealth's
principles, would be a betrayal of the people of Zimbabwe, and the
Commonwealth's own historical stand against racism."
Commonwealth leaders have a responsibility not to downplay the police
ill-treatment, illegal killings, and silencing of the media, judges,
political opposition party supporters, and human rights defenders
that AI has documented in Zimbabwe over recent years, he said.
"In the
1995 Harare Declaration member states recognised 'racial prejudice
and intolerance as a dangerous sickness and a threat to healthy
development'. Commonwealth members cannot pick and choose which
parts of the Harare Declaration to uphold, and to whom the rules
apply. This declaration is the bedrock of the Commonwealth's commitment
to standing up for people's rights. One standard for all must apply
? throughout Zimbabwe and throughout the Commonwealth".
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