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SADC
Ministers must stand up to Mugabe and support the SADC tribunal
- not sabotage it
The
Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC)
April 10, 2011
With the rule
of law under threat in much of the region, Southern African Development
Community (SADC) Ministers are meeting this week to decide the fate
of the SADC Tribunal - amid growing fears that they will conspire
to block individual access to the court, further imperilling human
rights and long-term economic growth.
"SADC
ministers face a simple choice - to strengthen the Tribunal, the
rule of law and prospects for progress in our region or render it
toothless and undermine SADC's own goals of sustainable economic
growth and human rights for all," said Nicole Fritz, Director
of the Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC).
The Council
of Ministers meeting in Namibia from April 11-15 is the culmination
of a process that began in August last year, when SADC heads of
state and government decided to review the role, functions and terms
of reference of the Tribunal.
The review was
occasioned by Zimbabwe's attack on the Tribunal, which had
ruled against
President Mugabe's government in a series of cases dealing
with land disputes.
"SADC
should have sanctioned or suspended Zimbabwe after its refusal to
abide by the Tribunal's rulings but instead SADC leaders effectively
suspended the Tribunal," said Fritz. "Ministers now
have the chance to undo the damage and reaffirm their support for
the rule of law - and ensure that southern Africans still have the
right to seek legal redress in their regional court."
SALC has signed
a petition along with 18 other organisations - including the SADC
Lawyers Association, the East Africa Law Society and the Pan-African
Lawyers Union - expressing their concern about the future of the
Tribunal and urging ministers to take measures to strengthen the
court - rather than sabotage it.
The petition
calls on ministers to retain the Tribunal's jurisdiction to
receive SADC citizens' petitions on issues of human rights
and trade, affirm its institutional autonomy and judicial independence,
and immediately ensure there are enough judges for a quorum so that
the Tribunal can continue its crucial work and guarantee the rights
of all SADC citizens to access justice.
Should SADC
act to deprive individuals of the right to access the tribunal,
it will remove one of the last remaining avenues southern Africans
have of securing recognition of their government's unlawful
actions. But it will also mean that investors in any SADC state,
who might be targets of arbitrary expropriation and unable to secure
relief before that country's courts, will have no right to
approach the Tribunal for determination of their entitlements and
protection of their property - seriously undermining investor confidence.
If SADC pursues
this path, it will also set itself at odds with the other regional
economic communities in Africa. Both the Economic Community of West
African States and the East Africa Community secure the rights of
individual access to their respective courts, recognising that such
access is critical to protecting human rights and to encouraging
economic growth.
For more information
- including a copy of the petition - please contact:
Nicole Fritz,
Director Southern Africa Litigation Centre; off +27 11 587 5065;
Cell +27 82 600 1028
Richard Lee, Communications Manager, Open Society Initiative for
Southern Africa; Off +27 11 587 5031; Cell +27 83 231 4192; Richardl@osisa.org
Signatories
to the Petition:
African Women
Millennium Initiative, Amnesty International, Centre for Human Rights
and Rehabilitation, Centre for Citizens Participation in the AU,
Coalition for an Effective African Court, Consortium of Refugees
and Migrants in South Africa, East Africa Law Society, Human Rights
Institute South Africa, International Commission of Jurists, Lawyers
for Human Rights South Africa, Open Society Justice Initiative,
Pan-African Lawyers Union, Southern Africa Litigation Centre, SADC
Lawyers Association, SADC Council of NGOs, Tanganyika Law Society,
Zimbabwe Law Society, Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights, Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum, Zimbabwe
Exiles Forum
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