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Chinamasa attacks civil society at UN Human Rights Council inauguration
Tererai
Karimakwenda, SW Radio Africa
June 22, 2006
http://www.swradioafrica.com/news220606/chinamasa220606.htm
The minister
for Justice and Parliamentary Affairs Patrick Chinamasa made a blistering
attack on Zimbabwe’s civil society at the inauguration of the new
United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva Wednesday. He also
misled the Council about Zimbabwe’s appalling human rights record.
In a speech that portrayed the government as a victim of non-governmental
(NGO) activity, Chinamasa accused developed countries of interfering
with internal affairs and supporting regime change through opposition
parties.
Chinamasa said
he hoped the Council will make it its business to depoliticise the
pursuit of human rights issues. He claimed civic groups operating
in Zimbabwe are set up and financed by developed countries as instruments
of their foreign policy." He went on to say: "Their objectives
include destabilisation and interference with the evolution of our
political processes, undermining our sovereignty, creating and sustaining
opposition groups that have no local support base, and promoting
disaffection and hostility among the local population against their
popularly elected government."
Chinamasa also
urged the new council to come up with a framework "..which
prohibits direct funding of local NGOs operating in the field of
human rights and governance issues by developed countries and their
agencies."
Fambai Ngirande,
spokesman for the National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations
(NANGO), which represents NGOs in Zimbabwe, told us Chinamasa had
made unsubstantiated claims.
He said Zimbabweans
had become heavily dependant on assistance from NGOs because the
government has failed to provide the basic needs of its citizens.
He added that NGOs were under no duress from the west or the international
community to interfere in political affairs.
Ngirande said
there is no money in Zimbabwe and unemployment is over 80% with
extremely high inflation rates. He said the private sector has no
money and neither does the government.
For this reason,
he said, NGOs have had to partner with international organisations
to bring food aid, medical assistance, education and other services.
It is widely accepted that without NGO assistance, Zimbabwe and
most of Africa would be in dire straits.
The justice
minister concluded his speech by assuring the council that Zimbabwe
would respect the human rights of all its people as provided for
in the Charter of The United Nations and of our Constitution.
The Council
did not know that at the time Chinamasa was giving this assurance,
police were disrupting the funeral of MDC president Morgan Tsvangirai’s
father in Buhera using the repressive Public Order and Security
Act. And WOZA women arrested in Harare on World Refugee Day on Tuesday
for demonstrating peacefully against unaffordable school fees were
forced to pay admission of guilt fines in order to buy their freedom
from police custody.
The new UN Human
Rights Council was created to replace the old Human Rights Commission
which had come under increasing criticism for its failure to act
on many violations of human rights law. The Commission’s voting
procedures allowed countries like China and others to block action
against consistent violators like the Mugabe regime and the Sudanese
government. It is hoped the new Human Rights Council will be much
more effective, but Chinamasa’s speech is not a good start.
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