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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
African
leaders should intervene
Human Rights Watch
January 22, 2009
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/01/21/zimbabwe-african-leaders-should-intervene
The African Union should
put concerted political pressure on Robert Mugabe to end Zimbabwe's
longstanding political crisis, which has led to an ever-deepening
humanitarian emergency and a regional crisis, Human Rights Watch
said in a report released today. The African Union will hold a summit
meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia from January 26 to February 3,
2009.
The 33-page
report, Crisis without Limits:
Human Rights and Humanitarian Consequences of Political Repression
in Zimbabwe, details the Zimbabwean government's responsibility
for the country's humanitarian crisis. A cholera epidemic
has left over 2,000 Zimbabweans dead and another 39,000 ill. Over
5 million Zimbabweans face severe food shortages and are dependent
on international aid. Repeated political interference by the ruling
Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF)
in the work of humanitarian agencies has severely hampered international
efforts to tackle the country's multiple crises.
"Robert Mugabe
and his ZANU-PF party have shown scant regard for the welfare of
Zimbabweans," said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director for Human
Rights Watch, "It is way past time for the African Union to
act to help end their massive suffering."
The Global
Political Agreement signed by ZANU-PF and the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), the opposition movement that won the country's
parliamentary elections, has all but collapsed and has not led to
a credible government of national unity or ended ZANU-PF's
widespread abuses. ZANU-PF has repeatedly breached the terms of
the agreement that committed the two parties to demonstrate respect
for democratic values and human rights. ZANU-PF's violations
of basic human rights and various governmental policies have worsened
the country's humanitarian crisis.
"Crisis without
Limits" is based on research conducted by Human Rights Watch
in six of Zimbabwe's 10 provinces from November 16 to 30,
2008. In-depth interviews were conducted with victims of human rights
violations as well as representatives of local and international
nongovernmental organizations and humanitarian agencies, United
Nations officials, MDC members, officials from the Ministry of Agriculture
and the Grain and Marketing Board, lawyers, health experts, economists,
and diplomats.
Human Rights Watch research
identifies the causes of the food shortage, the cholera outbreak,
and the collapse in Zimbabwe's health system. Repressive government
and extensive corruption have led directly to an interlinked economic
collapse, humanitarian crisis, and growing public desperation.
The report also documents
how ZANU-PF continues to use state institutions such as the police
and the justice system to violate the civil and political rights
of MDC members and supporters, civil society activists, and human
rights defenders. The police continue to use violence to break up
peaceful protests, and routinely persecute MDC activists.
Human Rights Watch expressed
concern about the lack of progress in mediation efforts by the Southern
African Development Community (SADC). Ongoing human rights abuses
have not ceased and those responsible have not been held to account.
Human Rights Watch called
on the African Union to insert itself formally into the mediation
process and set basic principles, specific human rights benchmarks,
and timelines for resolving the crisis. Among the steps it should
take are to condemn and call for an end to ongoing abuses by the
ZANU-PF authorities, including an end to politically motivated violence,
enforced disappearances, torture, and the release of MDC members
and human rights activists who are being arbitrarily detained. Human
Rights Watch urged the AU to suspend Zimbabwe from the organization
if - within a specific time frame - it does not meet
specific human rights and good governance benchmarks.
Food
Shortages
Human Rights Watch research
found that the Zimbabwean government bears primary responsibility
for the severe food shortages in the country. State-sanctioned political
violence led to the destruction of food granaries serving thousands
of Zimbabweans who were forcibly displaced by ZANU-PF supporters,
"war veterans," and soldiers and left them dependent
on food aid. Official interference in the operations of humanitarian
agencies that distribute food aid worsened the crisis.
Endemic corruption within
state-run agricultural institutions such as the Grain and Marketing
Board and by ZANU-PF's political elite has also led to severe
shortages of seed and other farming supplies such as fertilizer.
Many of the government's agricultural policies have benefitted
the pro-ZANU-PF political elite. The Zimbabwean authorities have
diverted state-subsidized maize, seed, fuel, and cheap tractors
meant for local farmers to local ZANU-PF officials and governors,
who have then sold them on the black market at high prices unaffordable
for most Zimbabweans. And the government has done little to address
the corrupt practices that have affected the food supply.
Health
Crisis - Cholera
The Zimbabwean authorities
have been aware of the potential for a major cholera outbreak for
nearly a year. In December 2007, 459 cases of cholera were reported
in two high-density suburbs of the capital, Harare, and 11 people
died from cholera and more than 300 were hospitalized in Bulawayo.
Despite repeated calls to address the epidemic and to ensure that
municipal water sources were properly treated, the government did
not respond adequately.
While the capacity to
respond to the cholera outbreak may have been undermined by a lack
of medical and financial resources, health officials informed Human
Rights Watch that the Zimbabwean government initially refused to
acknowledge the extent of the cholera crisis and the urgent need
to respond. Despite an alarming increase in cholera deaths and infections,
the government did not immediately appeal for international help
and initially refused to declare the outbreak an emergency.
Zimbabwe's failing
health system, in which ordinary Zimbabweans are no longer able
to get basic health care, has aggravated the cholera epidemic. Many
district hospitals and municipal clinics in Zimbabwe are either
closed or operating at minimum capacity. Dilapidated infrastructure,
equipment failures, shortages of drugs, and a "brain drain"
of medical professionals have all contributed to the collapse of
the health system.
"The Zimbabwean
government is responsible for the humanitarian crisis and the failure
to protect Zimbabweans from its consequences," said Gagnon,
"The government has violated the basic rights of Zimbabweans
to food, health, and clean water."
Since the end of October,
ZANU-PF has used the police and other state agencies to arbitrarily
arrest and "disappear" more than 40 MDC members and
human rights activists. Thirty-two MDC members and human rights
activists have been detained by the Zimbabwe authorities on various
charges of attempting to overthrow the government - charges
that Human Rights Watch believes are politically motivated. Most
of the activists who have been charged say they were tortured by
state security agents during their detention. The authorities are
refusing to disclose the whereabouts of 11 other MDC members.
Regional leaders have
repeatedly ignored the violations of human rights inflicted on Zimbabweans
by Mugabe's government and have not taken serious steps to
help their suffering, Human Rights Watch said. SADC leaders have
also failed to take any measures that would promote genuine democratic
transition. At the same time, the combination of political instability,
the cholera outbreak, and severe food problems have driven thousands
of Zimbabweans into neighboring countries. The influx has also taken
cholera across Zimbabwe's border to neighboring countries,
including Botswana, Mozambique, and Zambia.
"The urgent humanitarian
needs of Zimbabweans are a direct consequence of ZANU-PF's
abusive rule," said Gagnon. "The AU can only restore
the security and well-being of people in the region by openly acknowledging
the scale of the crisis, putting human rights at the top of the
agenda, and holding abusers to account."
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