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African
governments must pressure Zimbabwe on human rights
Amnesty
International
October 28, 2009
Amnesty International
today warned that Zimbabwe is on the brink of sliding back into
the post-election violence that marred the country last year, risking
undermining the stability brought about by the creation of the unity
government in February.
The organization called
on Southern African Development Community (SADC) foreign ministers,
visiting Zimbabwe on Thursday to assess the eight month-old unity
government, not to ignore the worsening human rights situation.
In recent weeks, there
have been several arrests of civil society leaders and reports of
harassment and intimidation of political opponents by ZANU-PF supporters
in rural areas. In particular, Amnesty International has received
reports of increased threats of violence in Mashonaland East and
Central provinces against known supporters of the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) formation led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.
On 25 October,
Cephas Zinhumwe, Executive Director of the National
Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (NANGO), and Dadirai
Chikwengo, NANGO board chairperson, were both arrested by police
in Victoria Falls after NANGO convened a workshop for NGO directors.
"Dozens of human
rights and MDC activists are on trial for simply exercising their
internationally recognized rights, including the rights to freedom
of association, peaceful assembly and expression. Some of these
people were victims of enforced disappearance in 2008," said
Erwin van der Borght, Director of Amnesty International's
Africa Programme
Amnesty International
urged the SADC ministers to rethink the role of the Joint Monitoring
and Implementation Committee (JOMIC), created under the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) establishing the unity government,
to ensure the implementation of the agreement, including its human
rights aspects.
"JOMIC is ineffective
and has fallen victim to political polarisation. It is very weak
and is solely dependent on the good will of the feuding parties
- a recipe for disaster," said Erwin van der Borght.
Amnesty International
also challenged the SADC and the African Union (AU) to tackle human
rights violations by government bodies under the control of ZANU-PF.
"Some elements
in the unity government continue to persecute perceived political
opponents through unlawful arrests and malicious prosecutions. This
is fuelling tension in the unity government and increasing fear
amongst the people," said Erwin van der Borght.
"SADC needs to
recognize this recent deterioration in the human rights situation
and tackle it immediately - before it degenerates further."
The organization said
that central to addressing the crisis in Zimbabwe was the need to
rein in the country's security agencies and end the culture
of impunity for human rights violations. Amnesty International called
on the Zimbabwean government to implement institutional reforms,
including reforming the country's security agencies to ensure
that they respect and protect human rights of all people in Zimbabwe.
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