|
Back to Index
Statement
on the proposed Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum
April 10, 2006
The Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum has taken note of recent press reports to
the effect that the Zimbabwean Cabinet, on 21 March 2006, has approved
proposals by the Ministry of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs
to set up a constitutional body called the "Zimbabwe Human
Rights Commission". It is indicated that this body will
have the mandate to focus on the promotion, protection, and respect
for human rights in Zimbabwe.
Whilst the suggestion
to set up a Human Rights Commission in Zimbabwe would ordinarily
be welcomed, the Human Rights Forum wishes to express a number of
reservations about such a suggestion coming at this time.
Firstly, the
Minister concerned claims that the major reason for setting up this
Commission is to "counter the large scale orchestration of
alleged violations" and the "falsification, exaggeration,
orchestration, and stage-managing of human rights violations by
detractors". The Human Rights Forum, in the absence of a positive
Government response in the past, has been forced to undertake expensive
civil litigation on behalf of many hundreds of victims, and here
it is gratifying to note that the courts have generally supported
these claims, or the Government itself has conceded liability. The
Human Rights Forum thus takes the strongest possible exception to
such an implication by the Minister, and accordingly can only view
the current proposal as wholly mala fides in its intent.
Secondly, the
Minister has claimed that a major purpose of the purported Commission
will be to verify allegations of human rights violations, and here
the Human Rights Forum would point out that the Forum since its
inception in 1998 has been requesting that the Government do exactly
this, with no response to date. Therefore the Minister’s sincerity
must be called into question.
Thirdly, the
timing of this proposal, following a number of adverse reports on
the human rights record of the Zimbabwe Government – by the African
Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the UN Special Envoy
on Human Settlements Issues - and the claim that this will restrict
the avenues open to redress by the victims of human rights violations
can only be seen as a device to avoid scrutiny, criticism and action
by its peers in the region and further afield, as has increasingly
become the norm over the last few years.
Fourthly, in
the current context of Zimbabwe, it is evident that the Government
has to date been unable to establish a single Commission or body
that can remotely be described as "independent", impartial
and effective. This is the clear conclusion from the Constitutional
Commission onwards, and hence the Human Rights Forum wishes to strongly
urge the Government to create a Human Rights Commission which will
be genuinely independent, impartial and effective.
Fifthly, the
prospect of yet another piece-meal amendment to the much discredited
Constitution cannot be supported. The Human Rights Forum thus supports
the position of most other civil society bodies; that constitutional
amendments, without complete constitutional reform, cannot act as
a protection for the human rights of Zimbabwean citizens.
Visit the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum fact
sheet
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
|