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Amnesty
International Secretary General visits Zimbabwe
Amnesty International Zimbabwe
July 31, 2009
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In 2009 the AIZimbabwe
was graced with a visit from a visit from the High Level Mission
from Amnesty International which included the Secretary General
of Amnesty International, Ms Irene Khan. Amnesty International secretary
general was in Zimbabwe for a six day visit. During her first visit
to Zimbabwe she held talks with Vice President Joice Mujuru, Minister
of Defence Emmerson Mnangagwa, Minister of Education David Coltart,
Minister of State in the President's Office Didymus Mutasa,
Deputy Minister of Justice Jessie Majome, Co-Home Affairs Ministers
Kembo Mohadi and Giles Mutsekwa, and Speaker of Parliament Lovemore
Moyo. She also held meetings with the Prime Minister Morgani Tsvangirai
in London.
It should be noted that
Ministers Didymus Mutasa, Emmerson Mnangagwa and President Robert
Mugabe were among the AI Prisoners of Conscience whose release was
campaigned for by Amnesty International during their imprisonment
by the Smith regime.
Amnesty International
called for strengthening the voice of civil society which is critical
to society. Amnesty International also called for the rights to
freedom of assembly, association and expression to be guaranteed.
Ms Khan stated "No meaningful debate can take place without
freeing the media. Both national and international media should
be allowed to operate freely. This would require neither additional
money nor new laws"
Amnesty International
also called on the Zimbabwean government and the donor community
to expand its humanitarian assistance and focus on primary education,
saying the paying of primary school fees and levies must be abolished.
The Secretary General noted that parents in Zimbabwe are being forced
to make impossible choices such as feeding their children in comparison
to educating them, between sending their son or their daughter to
school.
The High Level
Mission also noted that the establishments of the Inclusive Government
and the GPA
have changed the political dynamic - and this is something
that can and must be built upon both nationally and internationally.
The new power-sharing government between the political leaders has
established a national healing ministerial team that will address
the violence that troubled the country especially in the run-up
to last year's run off poll. The High Level Mission also met
with board and staff of AIZimbabwe. AIZimbabwe managed to showcase
Human Rights Education on one of its campaigns, Stop Violence Against
Women at Hopley Farm, 14km outside Harare. More than 1000 participants
attended the meeting at Hopley Farm.
This was the first-ever
visit by an Amnesty International Secretary General to the Zimbabwe,
though the organization has been monitoring human rights in the
country since the 1960s.
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