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Presentation
at Pre-African Union Summit African Civil Society Day in Solidarity
with Zimbabwe
Gabriel
Shumba, Zimbabwe Exiles Forum (ZEF)
June 28, 2007
Distinguished
Delagates,
Civil Society Representatives,
Colleagues.
Allow me to
express my profound gratitude for the solidarity and concern that
you have shown to the suffering people of Zimbabwe today. This is
even more poignant coming as it does on the heels of the touching
support shown to the people of Dafur yesterday. As an exiled Zimbabwe
human rights lawyer, I speak for the millions of Zimbabweans who
have been forced into exile. You may perhaps know already that apart
from the world's highest inflation, Zimbabwe is now producing
highest number of immigrants in Africa today. On this point, the
Zimbabwe Minister of Justice observed on Ghana radio last month
that this attests to the excellence of Zimbabwe's educational
system as most of the Zimbabweans who leave the country are in fact
skilled professionals who are in high demand overseas and regionally.
We need to interrogate this statement.
To begin with,
I would like to point out that in South Africa alone, there are
more than Zimbabwean 2.5 million asylum seekers, refugees and other
immigrants. In Botswana it is estimated that there are about 800
000 Zimbabweans, and in the UK a similar number. Let me talk about
those that have fled Zimbabwe to neighboring countries. Those who
cannot obtain visas to South Africa risk all sorts of perils to
get into Johannesburg. This includes drowning while crossing the
Limpopo River. There is a considerable number of these who have
been eaten by crocodiles, according to eye witness accounts. Others
have been raped by predator gangs of criminals. Many have resorted
to prostitution and crime.
There are also
disabled Zimbabweans who have been forced out of their homeland,
many of whom are found begging in Johannesburg and Pretoria. Children
have also been abandoned at Beitbridge Border post, and nearly two
hundred of these were deported with their mothers a few weeks ago.
South Africa now deports about 4 000 Zimbabweans a week. Last year
about a 100 000 were deported. Botswana deported 60 000 and conditions
are equally bad, if not worse as some Zimbabweans are sleeping in
caves at night in Botswana, in much the same way others are sleeping
under bridges in SA. Would anybody voluntarily choose the risks
and privations that I have described?
Many of us who
fled Zimbabwe had the difficult choice of opting for exile or suffer
torture, rape, starvation and possible death because of our government's
intolerance to diversity of opinion. This is an indication that
something has gone horribly wrong in post-independence Zimbabwe.
I submit that what has gone wrong in my country today is the erosion
of basic rights, the breakdown of the rule of law and crimes against
humanity including torture of those that are not in agreement with
the government of President Robert Mugabe and the ruling ZANU (PF)
party. All this is what has forced over a quarter of our citizens
into exile. May I also mention that this part of the population
has now been that the government of Zimbabwe deliberately chose
to disenfranchise. This significant segment of our population cannot
have a say in the governance of their country.
[Personal testimony
of Gabriel Shumba regarding his torture in Zimbabwe was then given]
Conclusion
Ladies and gentlemen,
I conclude by positing that aspirations for a union government and
a United States of Africa remain hollow, meaningless and unachievable
if the respect for human dignity, civil liberties and good governance
has not been improved. All that we as Zimbabweans are asking the
continent to do is to assist us regain the freedoms that were ushered
in by our independence in 1980: to enjoy all the rights that Ghanaians,
South Africans and others enjoy, without fear of torture, rape and
death.
I thank you
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