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Resolution
on Zimbabwe
International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH)
March 09, 2004
Read
Arnold Tsunga's report on FIDH
Read the paper presented by Arnold
Tsunga at FIDH
The International
Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), gathered at its 35th Congress at Quito,
Ecuador between 2 and 7 March 2004, expresses its deep concern about the
human rights situation in Zimbabwe
RECALLING the United
Nations General Assembly Resolution 53/144 of 9 December 1998
which outlines the Rights and Responsibilities of Individuals, Groups
and Organs of Society to Promote and Protect Universally Recognized Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms,
Noting that the constitutional
and electoral processes in Zimbabwe of 2002 in terms of which Robert Mugabe
maintained power have exacerbated divisions and polarization whereby principles
of good governance, the rule of law and respect for human rights have
been violated,
STRESSING that the
prime responsibility and duty to promote and protect human rights and
fundamental freedoms in Zimbabwe lie with the State,
EMPHASIZING the important
role that individuals, civil society organizations and groups play in
the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms,
NOTING with grave
concern that serious violations of internationally recognized human rights
standards are widespread in Zimbabwe characterised by the following;
- Implementing legal
provisions in a political and selective way in order to silence human
rights defenders;
- Forcing NGOs to
register in terms of the Private Voluntary Organisations Act in order
to limit freedom of association, creating possibilities for closure
of independent NGOs for lack of registration and the arrest of their
representatives;
- The drafting, without
consultation of independent and representative NGOs, of a new very restrictive
law governing the work of NGO’s aiming at notably forbidding any foreign
subsidies for Zimbabwean NGO’s;
- The promulgation
and selective use of security (repressive) laws such as the Public
Order and Security Act (adopted in January 2002), aiming at notably
prohibiting any criticism of the Head of state and its government officials
and suppressing freedoms of assembly, expression and movement/demonstration,
under the imprecise pretext of maintaining public order;
- The use of the
Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (adopted
in March 2002) to politically control and shut down the independent
media and limit the rights of NGOs to collect information;
- The adoption of
directives forcing the NGOs working on food to use State’s organs for
every distribution of food, thereby politicising food distribution in
violation of international humanitarian law;
- Significant increase
in the attacks of human rights defenders in both the scale and the methods
and forms of oppression which includes intimidation, harassment, arbitrary
arrests and detentions, false prosecution and even acts of torture against
human rights defenders – be they NGOs members, lawyers, magistrates,
journalist or trade unionists;
- More specifically
the following examples of attacks on human rights defenders were noted
with concern; On May 10, 2003, 46 women, members of a human right NGO,
were arbitrarily arrested and detained during a demonstration in Bulawayo
on mother’s day; On October 8 and 9, 2003, 165 trade unionists of the
Zimbabwe Confederation of Trade Unionists were arrested after a national
demonstration aiming at protesting against the rise of taxes and violations
of social rights; On October 22, 2003, in Harare, 400 human rights activists
were subjected to violence, arrests and detentions then freed under
bail for requesting for a constitutional change and the strengthening
of the democracy during a peaceful demonstration ;On February 4,
2003, several hundreds of members of the National Constitutional Assembly,
a forum of independent NGOs, were ill-treated by the police whilst they
were demonstrating before the parliament calling also for a constitutional
reform.116 persons were arrested and detained at the central police
station, accused of having organised an illegal demonstration; During
the year 2003 many lawyers were harassed and subjected to intimidation
for representing other human rights defenders.
OBSERVING THAT these
repressive legal provisions and their selective implementation constitute
obvious violations of international and regional human rights instruments
that bind Zimbabwe, such as the International Covenants on Civil And Political
Rights and On Economic, Social And Cultural Rights, the African Charter
On Human And People’s Rights, and the 1998 United Nations’ Declaration
on human rights defenders.
The Congress demands
- To the Zimbabwean
government
- To immediately
put an end to any kind of harassment and reprisals against human rights
defenders and restore the independence of the judiciary to ensure that
human rights defenders are able to pursue freely their activities, in
conformity with international and regional instruments that bind Zimbabwe
- To immediately
engage impartial and exhaustive investigations on all cases of violence
perpetrated against human right defenders in order to identify their
authors, to prosecute them and judge them in conformity with law
- To revise repressive
legislation such as POSA and AIPPA to put it in conformity with international
human rights standards
- To give a positive
answer to the request made by the Special representative of the United
Nation Secretary General on human rights defenders in 2003, to visit
Zimbabwe
- The United Nations
- To adopt, at the
March 2004 session of the Human rights Commission, a resolution on Zimbabwe
condemning human rights violations perpetrated by the regime, in particular
those targeting human rights defenders
- The Focal point
on human rights defenders of the African Commission on human and people’s
rights
- To give particular
attention to the situation of human rights defenders in Zimbabwe, and
to initiate a resolution in that sense at the next session of the Commission
in May 2004
- To make the findings
of the African Commission’s fact finding mission done in June 2002 public.
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