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ACHPR
endorses report on defending civil society
MISA-Zimbabwe
November 10, 2008
The African
Commission on Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR) together with delegates
to the Forum on the Participation of NGOs in the 44th Session of
the ACHPR on 8 November 2008 endorsed the Defending Civil Society
report that focuses on legal barriers facing civil society and the
principles that must be defended against violations by governments.
The 45-page
report co-authored by the World Movement for Democracy at the Washington-based
National Endowment for Democracy and the International Centre for
Not-for-Profit Law (ICNL) is based on extensive research and wide
consultation with NGOs around the world, particularly those working
on the advancement of democracy and human rights.
The launch ceremony
in Abuja, Nigeria was co-sponsored by the African Democracy Forum,
World Movement for Democracy and African Centre for Democracy and
Human Rights Studies. Panel discussions on the report focused on
international principles protecting civil society such as:
- The right
for individuals to form and join civil society organisations
- The right
of such organisations to function without state interference
- The right
to free expression
- Advocacy
-to communicate freely with domestic and international parties
The rights also
include the right to seek and secure resources across borders and
the state obligation to protect the rights of NGOs and civil society.
The report notes
the serious threats against civil society through intensified offensives
against democracy. "This ongoing backlash against democracy
has been characterised by a pronounced shift from outright repression
of democracy, human rights and civil society activists and groups
to more subtle governmental efforts to restrict the space in which
civil society organisations - especially democracy assistance groups
operate," says the report.
Barriers to
free civil society work come in the form of imprisonment, harassment,
disappearances and executions of activists and legal and quasi-legal
obstacles. The Interception
of Communications Act in Zimbabwe is cited as among the legal
barriers and criminal sanctions affecting free use of the Internet
and web-based communication that has seen human rights defenders
being arrested in countries such Syria, Angola and Russia. Laws
prohibiting or restricting certain categories of funding have similarly
been imposed in Eritrea, Algeria, Egypt, Moldova, Venzuela and Uzbekistan.
The report calls
upon international organisations to endorse it and the principles
it identifies; civil society organisations to conduct national and
regional discussions to mobilise support for the reform of legal
frameworks governing them. It further urges democracy assistance
organisations to distribute and promote the report to its partners
and grantees.
Proposed actions
and strategies to increase global response to the increasingly restrictive
environments for civil society organisations include among others:
- Calls on
democratic governments and international organisations including
the United Nations financial institutions and appropriate regional
organisations to endorse the report and principles it articulates
and to encourage national governments to adhere to them.
- Urge established
democracies and international organisations to reaffirm their
commitments to democratic governance, rule of law, respect for
human rights and develop consistent policies based on the principles
- Urge established
democracies and international organisations to reaffirm that proposed
restrictions on freedom of association are subjected to the rigorous
legal analytical test defined by in Article 22 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and energetically
publicise transgressions, particularly on the part of ICCPR signatories.
- Organise
discussions and hearings in parliaments, congresses and national
assemblies to raise lawmakers' awareness of the issues and principles.
- Monitor
the degree to which the principles in the report are being applied
in bilateral and multilateral relations.
Visit
the MISA-Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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