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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
African
activists launch new campaign: 'Stand up for Zimbabwe'
International
Bar Association (IBA)
May 23, 2008
http://www.ibanet.org/iba/article.cfm?article=169
Thousands of
people in dozens of cities across Africa and the rest of the globe
will demonstrate their solidarity with victims of rights abuses
in Zimbabwe on Sunday, 25 May 2008.
The Stand Up
For Zimbabwe campaign - organized by a coalition of African
civil society organizations including the Southern Africa Litigation
Centre, East Africa Law Society, Treatment Action Campaign, the
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition and the Congress of South African Trade
Unions - is highlighting the continuing political crisis in
Zimbabwe and calling on people across the globe to press the Southern
African Development Community, African Union, and the United Nations
to act decisively to end systematic political violence in Zimbabwe
and resolve the country's long-standing political crisis.
'The situation
in Zimbabwe continues to deteriorate because world leaders have
let Zimbabwe's rulers persecute opposition activists and subvert
democratic principles with impunity. This makes people lose faith
in democratic processes,' said Regis Mtutu, spokesperson for
the Treatment Action Campaign of South Africa. 'Zimbabweans
opposed to ZANU-PF face horrific violence every day. As African
civil society groups we are saying there has been enough hand wringing,
division and ineptitude in dealing with the crisis in Zimbabwe.
The consequences of the crisis reverberate across the region and
we cannot sit idly while our Zimbabwean brothers and sisters are
beaten, raped and driven away from their homes because they dare
to exercise their democratic rights. African political and civil
society leaders and other world leaders must act to stop the violence
and other human rights violations.'
The global day
of action on 25 May, a day traditionally used to celebrate the establishment
of the African Union (formerly the Organization of African Unity),
is the start of a series of campaign events planned to press African
and other world leaders to take effective action to resolve Zimbabwe's
crisis.
Events are scheduled
in the following locations:
South Africa,
Tanzania, Nigeria, Kenya, Zambia, Namibia, Burkina Faso, Botswana,
Lesotho, Benin, Cote d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Niger, Sierra
Leone, Togo, Cameroon and Senegal to name a few.
Details of the
campaign are posted on: www.standupforzimbabwe.org
Supporters of
the Stand Up For Zimbabwe campaign are calling for:
- the Southern
African Development Community (SADC), African Union and United
Nations to act immediately to protect Zimbabweans from organized
political violence;
- decisive
action to ensure a resolution of Zimbabwe's electoral impasse
and peaceful transition of government;
- survivors
and victims of violence to receive immediate medical, humanitarian
and legal aid;
- unrestricted
humanitarian aid to be allowed into the country to meet these
needs;
- the African
Union to send a team of eminent persons to Zimbabwe to investigate
the violence, and work towards ending the political crisis;
- SADC, under
the direction of the African Union, to ensure an environment which
allows a free and fair presidential election - free from
violence and intimidation and with free campaigning by all parties
before and during the presidential run off;
- African and
international human rights monitors and electoral observers and
monitors to be admitted to the country, allowed to travel freely
and assess and report on conditions. The electoral observers and
monitors must be composed of a large number of skilled electoral
experts, with a high standing in their countries and on the continent;
- the electoral
observers and monitors to remain in Zimbabwe to observe the counting
and the announcement of the result;
- the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission to run and manage the forthcoming presidential
elections in an impartial manner according to its obligations
under Zimbabwe constitutional and electoral laws; and
- in the event
of an electoral dispute where one candidate refuses to accept
the result of the run-off, the African Union to take the lead
in negotiating or mediating the impasse to reflect the will of
the people of Zimbabwe.
Nicole Fritz
from the Southern African Litigation Centre - one of the coalition
of African groups working on the Stand Up For Zimbabwe campaign
- said: 'We are determined to show solidarity with Zimbabweans
who face violence every day, and now must do so even in their place
of refuge - South Africa. The campaign is a call to the region
and the world to act decisively to end the violence in Zimbabwe
and to resolve the ongoing crisis but it now also signals that the
only strangers to our country, South Africa, are those who would
use violence and intimidation against others.'
Gugulethu Moyo,
Programme Lawyer for Southern African Issues for the International
Bar Association added: 'The people of Zimbabwe continue to
suffer horrific violence and oppression. They are victims of a belligerent
regime and an ineffectual international response. The suffering
has gone on long enough. It is time now for all those concerned
about the suffering of millions of Zimbabwean people to stand together
to press world leaders to meet their obligations to protect people
from an abusive government.'
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