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Act
on Zim rights abuses - HRW
News 24
August 14, 2007
http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/Zimbabwe/0,,2-11-1662_2164639,00.html
Lusaka - Human Rights Watch on Tuesday urged southern African leaders
to send monitors to Zimbabwe to investigate the clampdown on the
pro-democracy movement and the spiral of violence and intimidation
against activists.
The message
came ahead of the Southern African Development Community summit,
taking place in Zambia on Thursday and Friday. Leaders at the summit
were expected to discuss the worsening political and economic crisis
in Zimbabwe.
South African
President Thabo Mbeki is due to report on his efforts to mediate
between President Robert Mugabe and the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change.
Human Rights Watch said that southern African leaders should "insist
on tangible improvements in Zimbabwe" and incorporate human
rights concerns in the mediation talks.
'Western pawns'
It said the dispatch of monitors would be an "essential first
step in protecting Zimbabweans from state brutality."
"The political
and human rights crisis in Zimbabwe, which threatens to destabilise
the whole region, is crying out for urgent and effective leadership,"
the report said.
Mugabe's government
has used methods against critics that range from intimidation, threats
and harassment to physical attacks and torture. Hundreds of activists
have been arbitrarily arrested and beaten by police and other security
agents, it said.
The report cited
the example of the arrest and assault in police custody of more
than 200 activists from the National Constitutional Assembly on
July 25. This follows the arrest and torture of pro-democracy activists
in March.
Attempts to
reach Zimbabwean officials on Tuesday, a national holiday in Zimbabwe,
were not immediately successful. However President Robert Mugabe
has repeatedly said the use of force against opposition activists
is justified, saying they are Western pawns intent on destabilising
the country.
Human Rights
Watch said southern African leaders should "send a clear, visible
and unambiguous message" rejecting Zimbabwean government's
policy of political repression and the unaccountability of its police,
army and security forces.
It criticised
the lack of action by the 14-member community in the past.
"Only by
addressing the human rights violations in Zimbabwe can SADC hope
to nurture a political and economic revival in the country,"
it said.
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