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SADC:
Take action to end Zimbabwe rights crisis - Send human rights monitors
to end state brutality
Human
Rights Watch
August 14, 2007
http://hrw.org/backgrounder/africa/zimbabwe0807
Government leaders gathered this week at a summit in Lusaka, Zambia
should urgently press Zimbabwe's government to end its broadscale
attack on human rights, Human Rights Watch said in a briefing paper
released today. Human Rights Watch called on the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) to deploy human rights monitors to
Zimbabwe to assess the situation.
The summit,
which takes place on August 16 and 17, 2007 is expected to address
the ongoing political and economic crisis in Zimbabwe. At an extraordinary
summit in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in March 2007, SADC asked South
African president Thabo Mbeki to mediate talks between the ruling
Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) and the
two factions of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Mbeki is expected to report back on the progress of the talks in
Lusaka.
"SADC members
must take strong and effective action to deal with one of the region's
most grave crises - Zimbabwe," said Peter Takirambudde, Africa
director at Human Rights Watch. "SADC's credibility as a real
force for change on human rights is on the line here and its leaders
should insist on tangible improvements in Zimbabwe."
Human Rights
Watch urged SADC to more explicitly incorporate human rights concerns
in the mediation talks and set clear benchmarks for progress within
a clear time-frame. The summit should make a public acknowledgement
of ongoing human rights problems, Human Rights Watch said, and deploy
SADC human rights monitors as an essential first step in protecting
Zimbabweans from state brutality.
In the past,
SADC has failed to extract concrete commitments on human rights
from the government of Zimbabwe. Although serious human rights problems
have plagued Zimbabwe for the past seven years, the conclusions
issued after SADC's past summits have failed to adequately reflect
these problems. For example, the final communique of the extraordinary
summit in Tanzania failed to mention the arrests and beatings of
opposition and civil society leaders or the broader human rights
situation in Zimbabwe.
The 13-page
briefing paper, "A Call
to Action: The Crisis in Zimbabwe - SADC's Human Rights Credibility
on the Line," highlights priority areas of concern on human
rights and proposes a number of actions to help tackle the crisis.
The government of Zimbabwe has used methods against critics that
range from intimidation, threats and harassment to physical attacks
and torture. Hundreds of civil society activists - including human
rights defenders, independent journalists and members of the political
opposition - have been arbitrarily arrested and beaten by police
and other security agents.
Police often
use unnecessary and lethal force to violently disrupt peaceful protests.
Recent examples highlighted in the memorandum include: the arrest
and assault in police custody of more than 200
activists from the National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA) when they attempted to demonstrate
against the Constitutional
Amendment Bill in Harare on July 25, and the arrest
and assault of up to 20 women from Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) during peaceful protests in Bulawayo
on June 6.
Human Rights
Watch called upon SADC to send a clear, visible and unambiguous
message from this week's summit, repudiating the Zimbabwean government's
policy of political repression through laws and the unaccountability
of Zimbabwe's police, army and security forces.
"The political
and human rights crisis in Zimbabwe, which threatens to destabilize
the whole region, is crying out for urgent and effective leadership,"
said Takirambudde.
"Only by
addressing the human rights violations in Zimbabwe can SADC hope
to nurture a political and economic revival in the country."
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