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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Inclusive government - Index of articles
Spotlight on inclusive government: It's not working - Index of articles
Government
of Zimbabwe withdraws invitation to UN Rapporteur on Torture at
the last minute
UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights
October
28, 2009
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/media.aspx
As previously announced,
the Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment, Manfred Nowak, was invited by the Government
of Zimbabwe to conduct an official fact-finding mission, from 28
October to 4 November 2009.
Upon his arrival in Johannesburg,
on transit to Harare, the Special Rapporteur was informed, that
the mission had been postponed by the Government on 26 October 2009,
stating that it "regrets to advise that due to the previously
unanticipated Consultative process currently taking place in Harare
involving the Government of National Unity and the Southern African
Development Community (SADC), the Government of Zimbabwe will be
unable to receive the Special Rapporteur on the proposed dates."
The Special Rapporteur
welcomes the SADC initiative and all efforts to resolve the political
crisis in the country. He also understands that the SADC Consultative
process might lead to certain changes in his meetings with Government
officials foreseen during his mission and offered his cooperation
and flexibility to the Government in this respect. He fails to be
convinced, however, that the Consultative process on Thursday, 29
October should be a valid reason to cancel his eight-day mission
at such a late stage.
Recent allegations that
MDC supporters and human rights defenders have been arrested, harassed
and intimidated during the past few days, highlight the urgency
of objective fact-finding by an independent UN expert at this crucial
stage. The Special Rapporteur therefore calls upon the Government
of Zimbabwe to receive him in Harare and allow the mission to go
ahead as planned.
Manfred Nowak, appointed
Special Rapporteur on 1 December 2004 by the UN Commission on Human
Rights, is independent from any government and serves in his individual
capacity. He has previously served as member of the Working Group
on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances, the UN expert on missing
persons in the former Yugoslavia, the UN expert on legal questions
on enforced disappearances, and as a judge at the Human Rights Chamber
for Bosnia and Herzegovina. Nowak is Professor of Constitutional
Law and Human Rights at the University of Vienna, and Director of
the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Human Rights.
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