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Last
chance to save the SADC Tribunal: Archbishop Tutu adds his voice
The
Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC)
August 15, 2012
At the end of
this week, leaders of the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) will decide on the fate of the SADC Tribunal - amid growing
fears that they will opt to scrap the court's human rights
mandate and block individual access to it.
The final decision
will be taken at the SADC Heads of State and Government summit in
Maputo from 17-18th August after a two-year review process, during
which the Tribunal has effectively been suspended and no new cases
have been heard.
"Southern
Africa was building a house of justice - a place where crimes
could not go unpunished and victims of injustice and human rights
abuses could turn with confidence - but that house is now
in grave danger," said Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu. "The
future of the SADC Tribunal hangs in the balance. Without it, the
region will lose a vital ally of its citizens, its investors and
its future."
Inaugurated
in 2005, the SADC Tribunal is empowered to adjudicate legal disputes
between member states and between companies and governments. Individuals
also have the right to take their governments to court when all
efforts to achieve justice within their own countries have failed.
Between 2007
and 2009, the Tribunal adjudicated on about 20 cases - the
vast majority of which concerned individuals complaining about violations
of human rights, democracy and the rule of law.
"A regional
court like the Tribunal is the only hope that a citizen has - that
when his or her rights are violated by national authorities, that's
where he or she can go," said Justice Dr Onkemetse Tshosa,
a former SADC Tribunal judge from Botswana.
But in August
2010, SADC leaders decided to review the role and functions of the
Tribunal after it had ruled against President Mugabe's government
in a series of cases dealing with land disputes in Zimbabwe. And
now it looks as if they might opt to axe two of the Tribunal's
key components - its human rights mandate and individual access
- following recommendations from SADC Justice Ministers and
Attorneys General.
"Individuals
access to the SADC court constitutes a key legal instrument that
has brought hope to victims of the abuse of power in countries such
as Swaziland, Malawi, Angola and Zimbabwe," said Tutu. "We
need the support of SADC citizens, civil society and the wider community
to save the SADC Tribunal so that the rule of law, development and
human rights are protected throughout our region."
Organisations
such as the SADC Lawyers Association, the International Commission
of Jurists and the Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC) have
been at the forefront of efforts to save the SADC Tribunal -
and real progress has been made. But while they welcome the likely
revival of the Tribunal, many activists fear that SADC's leaders
will only agree to let it function again if its functions are severely
curtailed.
And if SADC
decides to axe the Tribunal's human rights mandate and block
individual access, it will remove one of the last remaining avenues
that southern Africans have for securing legal redress for rights
violations and the unlawful actions of their governments.
SADC 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.
But SADC's leaders have previously opted to sacrifice the
Tribunal and the rule of law in the region to protect Mugabe's
government from the consequences of its actions - and they
could well opt to protect their peers rather than the rights of
SADC's 280 million citizens.
"If you
are a law-abiding Head of State, why are you scared that people
might want to go through another adjudicator, unless it is that
you fear you are likely to fall foul of the law?" asked Tutu.
The choice confronting
SADC's leaders in Maputo is simple - to strengthen the
Tribunal, the rule of law and prospects for progress in the region
or weaken it and undermine SADC's own goals of sustainable
economic growth and human rights for all. Sadly, they have chosen
the wrong option in the past and could well do so again.
"As an
African, I am sad that we should give this image of ourselves that
we are basically not in favour of the rule of law," said Tutu.
"It is up to all of us to ensure that SADC not only reinstates
the Tribunal but also strengthens it."
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