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ZIMBABWE:
NGOs call on AU rights body for aid
IRIN
News
November 23, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=50264
JOHANNESBURG
- Zimbabwean NGOs have appealed to the African Union's human rights
body to help the hundreds of thousands of people left homeless by
the government's recent clean-up campaign.
The AU's African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR)
is in session in Gambia until next week, "and we are asking the
organisation to champion the cause of those affected by Operation
Murambatsvina [Drive Out Filth] - it is a humanitarian disaster,"
said Eileen Sawyer, director of the Human
Rights Forum (HRF), a coalition of 17 Zimbabwean NGOs.
A UN report estimated that Operation Murambatsvina, which the government
said was aimed at clearing slums and flushing out criminals, had
left more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood after
kicking off in May.
Bahame Tom Nyanduga, an ACHPR representative and Special Rapporteur
Responsible for Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Internally Displaced
Persons in Africa, attempted to gauge the impact of the operation
in July, but had to leave the country without completing his mission
after his visit was described by Zimbabwe's official media as "unprocedural"
because diplomatic protocol had reportedly not been followed.
HRF has also released an audit of ACHPR's recommendations, made
in 2002 after a fact-finding mission in the wake of elections, which
found evidence of human rights violations. The AU has not commented
on the report, which was finally adopted last year.
"We wanted to point out that there has been no improvement in the
situation since then [2002]. While physical violence has dropped,
there has been an increase in intra-party violence in both the ZANU-PF
and the [opposition] MDC [Movement for Democratic Change] as a result
of faction fighting ahead of the [26 November] senate elections,"
explained Sawyer.
The intra-party violence "is to an extent" related to power struggles
within the parties, she noted. The MDC is believed to be on the
verge of a split over its participation in the senate elections,
scheduled for this weekend.
Sawyer said recent amendments to the constitution had made "life
increasingly difficult for ordinary people": they effectively abolish
freehold property titles; remove the landowner's right to appeal
expropriation; usurp the authority of the courts, and restrict the
movement of Zimbabweans.
Early this month several hundred trade unionists and members of
the National Constitutional Assembly, a pro-democracy civic alliance,
were arrested for holding an anti-poverty demonstration.
"As the Zimbabwean crisis extends into another year, the absence
of national dialogue remains a deeply disturbing feature of the
political landscape ... It appears highly unlikely that internal
opposition forces will, in the near future, be able to build sufficient
pressure to force ZANU-PF into a political compromise," the HRF
report observed.
According to HRF, the rapidly declining economy was unlikely to
make the government "more pliant", and could perhaps lead to a "more
authoritarian state reaction".
Zimbabwe's Minister of Security, Dydimus Mutasa, dismissed HRF's
claims as "lies", saying, "What human rights have been abused?"
He also rejected suggestions of dialogue with the opposition. "Who
is anyone to tell us to talk to the opposition - where in the world
does that happen?"
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