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Rights commission: Another stillbirth
Patrice Makova,
The Standard (Zimbabwe)
March 17, 2012
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/local/34341-rights-commission-another-stillbirth.html
The Zimbabwe
Human Rights Commission, touted as the panacea to worsening human
rights violations in the country, appears to have suffered a stillbirth.
Two years after
the swearing in of commissioners, the body is still not operational
as political parties in the coalition government haggle over its
mandate and scope of work.
The commission
was established by Section 100R of the Constitution after Amendment
number 19 in 2009.
Over three years
after Amendment 19, which was brought by the signing of the Global
Political Agreement (GPA), human rights violators remain scot-free
with very few, if any, of them being investigated or prosecuted
as Parliament
has not yet passed an enabling act to allow ZHRC to do its work.
As the country
prepares to hold elections later this year or in 2013, human rights
activists believe giving teeth to the commission would be helpful
in stemming violence which has become synonymous with polls in Zimbabwe's
highly polarised political environment.
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition acting director Dewa Mavhinga said Zimbabwe,
particularly Zanu PF, has never been serious about ensuring the
respect, promotion and protection of human rights, hence operationalising
ZHRC has been put on ice for two years now.
He said the
ZHRC has a narrow mandate of examining human rights cases only from
February 2009 when the most flagrant human rights violations were
committed much earlier during the Gukurahundi period in the 1980s
and successive elections, particularly the June 2008 presidential
run-off election and during the 2005 operation Murambatsvina.
"We want
to see a fully functional ZHRC whose independence is constitutionally
enshrined, and with full investigative powers to examine any human
rights matter brought before it," said Mavhinga.
He said the
commission must be accountable to Parliament, with its own resources,
and not to the Minister of Justice who is a political appointee.
National Association
of Non-Governmental Organisations (Nango) Chief Executive Officer,
Cephas Zinhumwe said the ZHRC was an important organ which lacks
support from government.
He said the
commission was there in name only as it does not have a secretariat
and budget in addition to the absence of the requisite enabling
act. "The government is mentally killing the commissioners
because they came in with a lot of zeal and enthusiasm to do their
work, but they are now gloomy with absolutely nothing to do,"
said Zinhumwe.
He said Justice
minister Patrick Chinamasa was currently in Geneva, Switzerland
attending the United Nations Human Rights Council where he was speaking
glowingly about the ZHRC.
"It is
surprising Chinamasa is giving too much credit to Zimbabwe for establishing
a commission which is dysfunctional," said Zinhumwe. "The
commissioners do not know their powers and if we go for elections
like this, then human rights violations will again go unchecked."
The
mandate of the human rights commission and the members
The functions
of the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commision include the promotion of
human rights awareness and development, monitoring and assessing
human rights observance and investigating alleged violations of
human rights.
ZHRC members
include Professor Austin, Dr Ellen Sithole, Dr Joseph Kurebwa, Jacob
Mudenda, Japhet-Ndabeni Ncube, Sheila Matindike, Elasto Mugwadi,
Ona Jirira and Norma Niseni.
Parties
can't agree on how much dirt to expose - Gutu
Deputy Minister
of Justice, Senator Obert Gutu attributed the delay in the enactment
of the ZHRC bill to the wrangles between Zanu PF and the MDC-T over
how far back the body should investigate human rights abuses.
He said while
MDC-T wants the commission to investigate abuses committed since
Independence in 1980, Zanu PF was adamant that it should only deal
with cases which happened after the formation of the inclusive government
in 2009.
"I will
not be surprised if Zanu PF plays a delaying tactic and stops Minister
Chinamasa from presenting the bill in Parliament as scheduled. The
party has indicated that it does not want the issue to be debated
because it is a GPA issue," said Gutu.
ZHRC Chairperson
Professor Reginald Austin could not be reached for comment.
According to
the Constitution,
the ZHRC also assists the Minister of Justice to prepare reports
on Zimbabwe's compliance with international human rights agreements
to which Zimbabwe is a party. A ZHRC member told The Standard last
week that until the necessary legislation has been put in place,
the body would remain as good as dead as its legal status, conditions
of service of commissioners and the issue of the secretariat were
sticking points which need to be ironed out.
He however said
commissioners were currently holding informal meetings with relevant
stakeholders who include civil society organisations, the media
and government. They were also preparing for the eventual "resurrection"
of the body by studying how other countries were running their own
commissions.
Zimbabwe
Human Rights Association (ZimRights) executive director Okay
Machisa said the issue of the dysfunctional commission proves that
government was not interested in coming up with a holistic and sincere
approach to implementing reforms as spelt out in the GPA.
He said the
GPA came about after a disputed
poll in 2008 which was marred by violence, intimidation and
other gross human rights violations. "For the country to go
for another election in the absence of a human rights commission
is worrying," said Machisa.
"This
is a deliberate ploy by certain people in the inclusive government
who want to maintain the status quo and continue to violate the
rights of citizens with impunity."
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