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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Zimbabwe: Government must not be allowed to silence African Union
Amnesty International
AFR 46/023/2005
July 08, 2005
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAFR460232005
Amnesty International
today urged the African Union (AU) to challenge attempts by the
government of Zimbabwe to frustrate the AU's investigation of the
current human rights crisis in Zimbabwe.
The call came
following yesterday's departure from Zimbabwe of Bahame Tom Nyanduga,
a member of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights
(ACHPR). Mr Nyanduga had been sent to Zimbabwe by the AU to undertake
a fact-finding mission, but left the country having been prevented
by the government from fulfilling this mission. The government of
Zimbabwe has reportedly claimed that there were "procedural
irregularities" regarding his visit.
"By trying
to block the work of an African Union representative through the
use of blatantly obstructionist procedural excuses, the government
of Zimbabwe is showing its real fear - that African Union criticism
will force other African governments to finally tackle the human
rights and humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe publicly and effectively,"
said Kolawole Olaniyan, Director of Amnesty International's Africa
Programme.
"It is
deplorable that the government of Zimbabwe has treated the African
Union and a respected member of its Commission in this way. We urge
African Union member states to uphold the African Union's credibility
and integrity and reaffirm their commitment to human rights and
accountability by refusing to allow governments to deflect attention
from human rights violations by resorting to the flimsy excuse of
'procedural irregularities'."
Amnesty International
had welcomed the appointment of Bahame Tom Nyanduga as a concrete
response by the AU to widespread calls from African and international
human rights groups for the African Union to address the situation
in Zimbabwe.
"We were
very disappointed by the failure of the AU to address the crisis
in Zimbabwe at the African Union Assembly in Libya earlier this
week," said Kolawole Olaniyan. "We had strong hopes that
action would follow Commissioner Nyanduga's fact-finding mission.
His departure from Zimbabwe is a double blow - and we hope and expect
a strong African Union reaction."
Background
On 23 June 2005, Amnesty International, along with a coalition of
over 200 international and African human rights organizations, launched
an urgent "Joint Appeal" to the AU and UN urging them
to publicly condemn the violations taking place in the context of
the campaign of forced evictions and house demolitions and to take
effective action to stop them.
For further
information, please contact:
Elizabeth Berton-Hunter,
Media Relations (Toronto),
(416)363-9933 #32
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