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Zimbabwe
pressure group plans xenophobic attacks
Zimbabwe Human
Rights Association (ZimRights)
February 17, 2010
Reports have revealed that
the Affirmative Action Group (AAG) intends to forcefully remove all
Nigerians running businesses in the country in an effort to give leeway
for black Zimbabweans to take over.
The AAG stated
that these Nigerian businesses are by right supposed to be enjoyed
by Zimbabwean locals. Charles Nyachowa the group's president
cited that they have approached the government and presented their
position regarding the escalation of foreign owned businesses in the
country. Consequently they support the new Act that compels foreign
owned companies to cede 51% shareholding to black Zimbabwean.
It has been reported that
some Zimbabweans have conspired with foreign businessmen by arranging
marriages for their daughters in return for shares in their businesses.
According to Nyachowa, foreigners should bring machines to manufacture
goods and sophisticated technical expertise into the country.
Instead some Nigerian nationals
and those from western African countries such as Senegal and Guinea
have flooded business ventures in the country ranching from clothing,
retail, electrical shops and selling cell phone gadgets and accessories.
The AAG secretary
general, Tafadzwa Musarara said that the group would move door to
door as a measure to deal with any company that fails to comply with
the provision of the Indeginisation
and Economic Empowerment Act.
However Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai stated that the law is restrictive and destructive,
as it would scare away potential investors who were willing to give
the inclusive government the benefit of doubt.
With the constitution
making process in motion, ZimRights condemns these blatant acts of
alienation. Zimbabwean citizens and residents as well as non-nationals
have the right to invest in the country whose economy is in dire need
of capital injection. The move by the AAG is no different from the
South African wave of xenophobia that claimed the lives of hundreds
of Zimbabweans who were working in South Africa, which was a clear
violation of human rights.
Visit the ZimRights
fact
sheet
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