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AU
to suppress report on human rights in Zimbabwe
AFP
July 08, 2004
Addis Ababa - The
African Union (AU) was Wednesday set to suppress one
of its own reports critical of Zimbabwe's human rights record, in
the wake of protests about procedure and claims that the two-year-old
assessment was "smuggled" onto the agenda of this weeks AU summit. Foreign
ministers have advised their heads of state meeting in Addis Ababa to
"suspend the publication" of an annual report by the AUs Commission on
Human and People's Rights until concerned countries could include their
comments, according to an official record of the ministers decisions,
which tend to be adopted at AU summits. Ministers engaged in heated discussions
earlier this week over a part of this document that covered a visit to
Zimbabwe by the commission in June 2002. The row comes at a time when
the AU is trying to promote good governance and respect for human rights,
and to distance itself from the crippling non-interventionism that characterized
its predecessor, the Organisation of African Unity (OAU).
During its trip to
Zimbabwe, the commission found evidence of "political violence... torture...
and arbitrary arrest... of opposition members of parliament and human
rights lawyers," according to the summary of its findings annexed to the
annual report tabled at the AU summit. "There were allegations that the
human rights violations that occurred were in many instances at the hands
of (the ruling) Zanu PF party activists," the commission said, adding
however that it was unable to say that this was part of an orchestrated
government policy. "By its statements and political rhetoric, and by its
failure at critical moments to uphold the rule of law, the government
failed to chart a path that signalled commitment to the rule of law,"
it added. The AU body also noted "a flurry of legislation" that undermined
freedom of expression. "Zimbabwe said it was not the time" to formally
adopt the report, said one delegate present at the AU ministers meeting.
"They said the report should not been presented in this form and that
it lacked objectivity. They said this was the first time they had seen
the report," the official told AFP, adding that Zimbabwean Foreign Minister
Stan Mudenge had made his points very forcefully.
"It wasn't only Zimbabwe
that objected," said an AU official following the affair, explaining that
Tunisia was among the objecting states. "The issue was about procedure.
The Commission was expected to submit the report to all concerned parties.
This has not happened. Regulations were not adhered to," he added. Zimbabwean
Information Minister Jonathan Moyo on Wednesday accused the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change of "smuggling" the report onto the AU agenda
at the behest of British Prime Minister Tony Blair. There was no sign
of MDC officials at the Addis meeting. On Tuesday, the MDC welcomed the
report's exposure of alleged human rights violations by the government.
"We call upon the AU to take concrete steps to ensure that the Zimbabwean
government corrects its appalling record on civil liberties, freedom of
speech and human rights," the party said in a statement. The archbishop
of Buluwayo, Pius Ncube, separately slammed the AU's apparent decision
to back away from tackling the report during the summit. "I heard yesterday
(Tuesday) that the AU has failed to endorse the report because Zimbabwe
said they have not seen it but they've had it for two years," he said
at a breakfast meeting in Johannesburg. "That's the sad thing about African
leaders, they go there (to the summit) just to support each other. I'm
terribly disappointed, my heart is really down," Ncube added.
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