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Statement delivered by Ambassador C Chipaziwa to the 57th session
of the United Nations Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection
of Human Rights : Geneva, 3rd August
UN
Watch
Extracted
from The Wednesday Watch: Issue 134
August
03, 2005
http://www.unwatch.org/wed/134.html
(Item 3 : Administration
of Justice, Rule of Law and Democracy)
Chair,
Thank you for giving
us the floor.
We attach much importance
to this agenda item. Our people endured a bloody liberation struggle
so that they might enjoy freedom and bring democracy to 95% of our
countrymen then toiling under previous settler colonial rule. It
was a just struggle, which was not supported by the majority of
the western countries, which today lecture us on human rights. We
succeeded in dislodging a regime, which even to its parents, the
British, was illegitimate. Therefore, our attainment of independence
in 1980 was also a restoration of the rule of law.
The right to land was
a fundamental in our liberation efforts. Sovereignty would be empty
without control over this finite birthright. Our land restitution
exercise was an act of the fulfilment of our liberation. Our land
had been stolen from us the indigenous people, by agents of the
British ruling class. These British settlers had largely abandoned
the growing of staple foods when land redistribution got underway.
Instead, they had turned their efforts to eco-tourism and horticultural
ventures which afforded them easier means to externalise funds from
the country.
Our Southern African
region has recently suffered from successive unremitting droughts,
which have postponed the day when our country can once again produce
surplus grains and other food needs. We totally reject the insidious
notion that because a white settler farmer nolonger works the African
soil, the native will never again be able to feed himself.
There is no revolution
which is ever perfect in all its aims and means - Zimbabwe is no
exception in this regard. The recent clean-up of the illegal slum
dwellings in our towns and cities has resulted in reduced crime
and handsome settlements. From the erstwhile slums, Zimbabwe Government
detractors had plotted and carried out illegal currency trades in
efforts to destroy the country's economy. Order has returned to
our towns and cities and the economy has begun to recover. Regrettably,
many persons have suffered as this clean-up has progressed. However,
our Government is now fully engaged in the construction of better
housing for the dislocated people. This is a huge task which will
take time and require huge sums of resources. The Zimbabwe Government
welcomes any help from those who wish to see people achieve a better
standard of life through better housing and general orderly urban
settlements.
Humans began life hanging
from trees. We have no romantic attachment to seeing our fellow
citizens living in squalor. Those of our detractors who wish to
indulge in poverty-gaze tourism should soon be fully disappointed
within our urban areas.
It has been the well
homed intent of the enemies of the Zimbabwe Government to render
the country ungovernable through undeclared economic sanctions and
other acts of collective punishment. In its determined attempts
to maintain the rule of law, the democratically elected Government
has brought to book those accomplices of the erstwhile colonists
who have been overly zealous in their sordid acts of economic and
other criminal activities. kom those who sponsored these activities
from within and afar, many charges of torture have been strew in
all directions in efforts to paint a picture of a failed state whose
allegedly desperate elite wish to remain in power at all cost. This
is far from the reality obtaining in Zimbabwe. Any law enforcement
agent who has found it difficult to jettison the torture expertise
they might have learned from the British colonials have been accordingly
punished. It is also noteworthy that among those who preach human
rights today, are some large western countries which refuse to sign
the Convention Against Torture.
The Zimbabwe Government
rejects torture as a legitimate practice for maintaining law and
order and as a means by which to elicit information from those apprehended
for any crime.
Zimbabwe is a sovereign
country. It rejects double standards whereby the big can transgress
against international norms with impunity while the small can be
invaded even outside international law. Might should never mean
right. This Sub-Commission should dismiss with contempt all attempts
to overlook the misdeeds of the big whilst trumpeting out of all
proportion those of the small.
Zimbabwe is a beautiful
and peaceful country. She does not deserve the ugly attention which
her detractors try to conjure up without pause. We shall never yield
to their evil designs. We shall never be a subject people again.
Thank you.
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