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Inclusive government - Index of articles
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False
dawn: The Zimbabwe power-sharing government's failure to deliver
human rights improvements
Human
Rights Watch
August 31, 2009
http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2009/08/31/false-dawn-0
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1. Introduction
More than six
months after the formation of a transitional, power-sharing government
in Zimbabwe between the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front (ZANU-PF) and two factions of the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), there has been little progress in instituting any
promised human rights reforms and in demonstrating respect for the
rule of law. ZANU-PF, the former ruling party, wields significantly
more power than the MDC, and ZANU-PF supporters continue to commit
abuses against their perceived political opponents with impunity.
There is mounting evidence
that the new government is failing or unwilling to end serious human
rights violations, restore the rule of law, institute fundamental
rights reforms, and chart a new political direction for the country.
Despite commitments made by all parties, the new power-sharing government
has not taken any significant steps to ensure justice for victims
of abuses or hold perpetrators of human rights violations to account.
Police, prosecuting authorities, and court officials aligned with
ZANU-PF continue to conduct politically motivated prosecutions of
MDC legislators and activists.
This inaction cannot
be blamed on the country's financial crisis, itself caused by ZANU-PF's
years of misrule before 2009. Instead, it is due to an absence of
political will. ZANU-PF retains control of all senior ministries-including
the Ministries of Defence, Justice, State Security, and Foreign
Affairs; and it co-chairs Home Affairs. The party therefore wields
significantly more power than the MDC in the government, and is
unwilling to institute human rights and governance reforms. Although
the MDC has formal control of some ministries, President Mugabe
unilaterally appointed permanent secretaries to all ministries,
ensuring that ZANU-PF maintains control of them. Lacking real political
power to effect reforms, the MDC is unable to push for human rights
reforms and appears to be giving ground to ZANU-PF in order to ensure
the survival of the power-sharing government.
The Global
Political Agreement (GPA), signed in September 2008, calls on
its signatory parties to "build a society free of violence,
fear, intimidation, hatred, patronage, corruption and founded on
justice, fairness, openness, transparency, dignity and equality."
Human Rights Watch endorses this insightful conclusion and calls
on the power-sharing government, as well as Zimbabwe's neighbors
and allies, to ensure that the country embraces progressive and
sustainable change. If not, Zimbabwe risks sliding back into violence
and chaos.
This report recommends
a range of fundamental reforms that the power-sharing government
should undertake to improve the human rights situation in Zimbabwe.
Without these institutional and legislative reforms, as well as
the establishment of genuine respect for the basic rights of all
Zimbabweans, there can be no long-term, sustainable peace and stability
in Zimbabwe. These changes will also finally allow Zimbabweans to
elect leaders of their choice. And once these reforms are in place,
Zimbabwe will be better placed to attract international development
assistance and private sector investment.
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