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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Crisis
without limits
Human Rights Watch
January 2009
http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2009/01/21/crisis-without-limits-0
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Summary
Zimbabwe is
in a humanitarian crisis that is the result of a political crisis.
A cholera epidemic has—as of January 12, 2009—left over
39,000 people infected and at least 2,000 dead, with the disease
spreading to neighboring countries. This marks both the collapse
of Zimbabwe's healthcare system and the calculated disregard
for the welfare of Zimbabweans by the ruling party, the Zimbabwe
African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF). The country
is experiencing the sharpest rise in infant mortality in its history,
and maternal mortality rates have tripled since the mid-90s. Meanwhile,
over five million Zimbabweans face severe food shortages and are
dependent on international aid. Making matters worse, ZANU-PF's
repeated political interference in the work of humanitarian agencies
and its attempts to conceal the extent of the disaster have severely
hampered international efforts to help tackle these multiple crises.
ZANU-PF's longstanding
assault on political freedoms and civil rights lies at the heart
of Zimbabwe's humanitarian crisis. While political violence,
enforced disappearances, and arbitrary detentions by the government
of President Robert Mugabe peaked in the weeks leading up to the
run-off presidential elections in June 2008, they have continued
to the present as ZANU-PF uses repression to back its dubious claim
to power. Over 40 supporters from the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) and human rights activists have "disappeared"
or been arbitrarily detained since November 2008. ZANU-PF controlled
police units continue to violently break up peaceful protests, and
routinely arrest and harass MDC activists.
Despite the
ongoing and massive violations of Zimbabweans basic rights, African
governments have largely remained on the sidelines. The bi-annual
summit of African Heads of State in Addis Ababa from January 26
to February 3, 2009, provides African leaders with a crucial opportunity
to intervene effectively to end Zimbabwe's long-standing political
crisis.
African leaders need
to move beyond the failed mediation efforts of the Southern Africa
Development Community (SADC). Only concerted pressure on the Mugabe
government can end Zimbabwe's unprecedented humanitarian emergency
and the regional crisis it has created.
Hopes for an end to Zimbabwe's
crisis were raised on September 15, 2008 when ZANU-PF and the MDC,
with much fanfare from SADC and its mediator, former South African
president Thabo Mbeki, signed a Global Political Agreement (GPA)
in which both parties committed to acting in a manner that demonstrated
respect for democratic values and human rights. Many Zimbabweans
and concerned outsiders hoped the agreement would end ZANU-PF's
abusive practices, lead to a credible government of national unity,
bring about the reengagement of foreign donors, and lead to a gradual
recovery in the country's economic and social
conditions.
Human Rights Watch and
others warned that such an agreement would fail unless ongoing human
rights abuses ceased and those responsible were held to account.
Yet the continued absence of accountability in Zimbabwe remains
a major block to progress. ZANU-PF has not honored the letter and
spirit of the GPA: four months since it was signed, ZANU-PF violations
of basic human rights continue and its policies have deepened the
country's humanitarian crisis.
Increasingly,
Zimbabwe is a sub-regional crisis. Political and economic instability,
the cholera outbreak, and severe food insecurity have driven thousands
of Zimbabweans into neighboring countries. Cholera has spread from
Zimbabwe to South Africa, Botswana, and Mozambique. In December
2008, South Africa in effect acknowledged the regional nature of
the crisis by calling the spread of cholera from Zimbabwe to its
border town of Musina "a disaster." The African Union
(AU) should follow suit and openly acknowledge that the situation
in Zimbabwe threatens the entire region.
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