|
Back to Index
African
leaders break silence over Mugabe's human rights abuses
Andrew
Meldrum, The Guardian (UK)
January 04, 2006
http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/article/0,2763,1677460,00.html
President Robert
Mugabe's human rights record has been condemned for the first time
by African leaders, significantly increasing pressure on the Zimbabwean
leader to restore the rule of law and stop evicting people from
their homes.
The unprecedented
criticism comes from the African Union's Commission on Human and
Peoples' Rights, meeting in Banjul, the Gambia, which had until
now been silent about the growing evidence of human rights abuses
in Zimbabwe.
The commission's
report, obtained by the Guardian, expresses concern over "the continuing
violations and the deterioration of the human rights situation in
Zimbabwe, the lack of respect for the rule of law and the growing
culture of impunity".
A Zimbabwean
government spokesperson refused to comment on the report when contacted
yesterday.
The commission
said it was "alarmed by the number of internally displaced persons
and the violations of fundamental individual and collective rights
resulting from the forced evictions being carried out by the government
of Zimbabwe".
The commission
found that the Mugabe government had violated the African Union's
charter, which Zimbabwe has signed, as well as other international
laws including the United Nations declaration of human rights. Mr
Mugabe was urged to allow an African Union delegation to go on a
fact-finding mission to Zimbabwe. The report also called on the
Harare government to repeal several repressive laws, to stop the
forced evictions immediately and to allow "full and unimpeded access
to international aid to help the victims".
Zimbabwe has
prevented the UN and other organisations from helping the estimated
700,000 people made homeless or jobless by the evictions, which
began last May. At the end of a four-day visit to the country last
year, Jan Egeland, the UN's head of humanitarian aid, said that
Zimbabwean officials should be prosecuted over the mass housing
demolitions.
A Zimbabwean
lawyer, Gabriel Shumba, told the Africa commission's court, which
rules on human rights cases, that he was severely tortured in 2003
by Zimbabwe government agents who used electric shocks and forced
him to drink his own urine. The court will hand down its judgment
in May.
The African
Union, the successor to the Organisation of African Unity, is made
up of all the continent's political leaders. It also made statements
on the Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, the Darfur
area of Sudan, and Uganda. The resolution on Zimbabwe was adopted
in December, but it has only begun circulating now, after the government
was given time to respond to the document.
"This is a highly
significant report coming as it does from an affiliate body of the
African Union," said Iden Wetherell, an editor with the Zimbabwe
Independent group of newspapers. "It will be difficult for the government
to counter this. African institutions are now holding their leaders
accountable. Zimbabwe's delinquency can no longer be swept under
the carpet of African solidarity. This is peer review as it should
be, and it makes grim reading."
Elinor Sisulu,
director of the Zimbabwe Crisis Coalition's office in South Africa,
said: "It is great to see this group flexing its muscles. When human
rights abuses are rampant on this continent, it is important to
see the commission doing its job properly. This gives much-needed
encouragement to Zimbabweans, particularly those working in human
rights and civil society. Of course, the Mugabe government will
try to ignore it, but this comes from an African institution, run
by highly respected Africans. This is a stance the continent can
be proud of."
Zimbabwe has
begun the year with inflation above 500% and a third of the country's
12 million people in need of international food aid.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|