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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
No
supply of arms until state sponsored violence ceases
Amnesty International
April 23, 2008
http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/zimbabwe-no-supply-arms
All shipments
of small arms, light weapons and ammunition ordered from China by
the Zimbabwe Government must be halted as there is a real risk that
it may lead to increased human rights violations in Zimbabwe, said
Amnesty International.
"The international
community must not supply small arms to Zimbabwe until state sponsored
violence has ceased and the rule of law is re-established."
Amnesty International
extended its call to include a halt of sales to Zimbabwe of security
equipment including tear gas, water canons and other anti-riot equipment
which has been used in the past by the Zimbabwe Republic Police
to suppress the right to peaceful protest. Since 2000, police have
used excessive force against human rights defenders.
The organization
has documented serious human rights violations committed by soldiers
and police in Zimbabwe against opposition supporters after the elections
held on 29 March 2008. These abuses assaults and torture by soldiers,
police, so-called "war veterans" and supporters of the
ruling party, ZANU-PF, against people who have been accused of not
having voted "correctly." Though some victims have reported
these crimes to the police, no arrests have been reported and it
appears that perpetrators continue to commit abuses with impunity.
Amnesty International
welcomed the mobilization of civil society in South African and
other southern African countries to stop the delivery of arms to
Zimbabwe through legal and civil action taken in solidarity with
victims of state sponsored violence in Zimbabwe. The organization
welcomed the mobilization of the trade union movement which has
appealed to its members not to offload the cargo if the ship docks
at any African port.
"The mobilization
of civil society has proved critical in view of the inaction of
governments to put an end to arms trade to countries where there
is a pattern of gross human rights violations," said Amnesty
International.
"All political
leaders in southern African must urgently support the efforts of
civil society and demand an end to state-sponsored violence in Zimbabwe
and the return of the rule of law."
The An Yue Jiang
Chinese cargo ship carrying arms supplies to Zimbabwe, highlights
the absence of a global treaty to ensure proper regulation of the
conventional arms trade. Following a vote of 153 states in favour
to one against, Members States of the United Nations are considering
the feasibility, scope and parameters for a global Arms Trade Treaty
that would prevent the irresponsible trade in conventional arms,
and Amnesty International and its partners are appealing for such
a treaty to contain provisions to fully respect international human
rights and humanitarian law.
Amnesty International
called on all states to support the early establishment of a global
Arms Trade Treaty that contains robust provisions to reflect states'
obligations under international law and ensure these are incorporated
into national law.
Background
On 10 April 2008 the arms shipment arrived aboard a Chinese cargo
ship - the MV "An Yue Jiang" - in Durban, South
Africa. The ship's owner was the parastatal Chinese Ocean
Shipping Company and it was carrying cases of weaponry and ammunition
in six containers. The shipper of the arms was Poly Technologies
Inc of Beijing China, the delivery address on the shipping documents
was the Zimbabwe Defence Force, Harare, and the point of origin
on the cargo manifest is Beijing, China. The cargo in question consisted
of 3080 cases of arms contained in six containers. The Arrival Notification
described the contents as follows:
- 7.62 x 54mm
Ball - 1000 cases containing 1 million rounds
- 7.62 x 39mm
Ball - 1331 cases containing 2 million rounds
- RPC7, 40mm
Rockets - 250 cases containing 1500 rounds
- 60 mm mortar
bombs - 227 cases containing 2703 rounds
- 31mm mortar
bombs - 176 cases containing 581 rounds
- 31mm mortar
tubes - 93 cases containing 31 items
Legal action
to stop this Chinese arms consignment was taken on 18 April by concerned
South Africans with the support of human rights legal organizations
in a bid to constrain the authorities from allowing transhipment
of the arms through South Africa to Zimbabwe. The application was
brought in the Durban High Court on the grounds of South African
national law, which prohibits arms transfers that may contribute
"to internal repression or suppression of human rights and
fundamental freedom" or "to governments that systematically
violate or suppress human rights and fundamental freedoms".
An interim ruling was issued on 18 April to confine the arms to
Durban harbour pending a final court hearing but the ship sailed
away. Currently many governments, including in the SADC region,
and organisations worldwide are appealing for the arms transfer
to be prevented to Zimbabwe, but it is feared that the arms cargo
may be delivered to Zimbabwe through another route.
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