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Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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UN rights chief should press Mugabe on rights abuses

UN rights chief should press Mugabe on rights abuses

Clifford Chitupa Mashiri, 8th May 2012

Zimbabweans hope that the planned visit to Zimbabwe by the UN Human Rights 
Commissioner Navi Pillay will help put the country’s human rights record 
under the spotlight.

During her five-day visit starting on 20 May, Mrs Pillay is expected to pile 
pressure on Mugabe to account for rights violations and to reform ahead of 
the UN Secretary General’s expected visit in August 2013 for UNWTO.

The public is anxious on which rights abuses will feature in Mrs Navi Pillay’s 
engagement with the Zanu-pf leader, Robert Mugabe given an ever-growing list 
of military operations and reluctance to implement the Global Political 
Agreement.

Of major concern is the regime’s lack of remorse for rights violations 
during Gukurahundi, ‘Jambanja’ (the bloody farm seizures), Murambatsvina, 
Hakudzokwi and Makavhotera Papi and election 2008 political violence.

While Mugabe’s decision to ratify the 28-year old United Nations Convention 
Against Torture (CAT) is commendable, however, his ‘Damascus Moment’ is 
suspect as it arguably suggests he is only after the safeguards in the 
convention before his rule comes to an end.

It is one thing to agree to be bound by a convention, and another to 
implement it because there is need for political will.

Sadly, the lack of political will manifests itself in many ways including 
failure to account for the whereabouts of human rights activist Paul Chizuze 
who mysteriously went missing a month ago.

So is the delayed enactment of the Human Rights Commission Bill with a 
mandate to investigate pre-2009 rights violations as opposed to only 
post-2009 incidents as proposed by Zanu-pf.

Furthermore, there is reluctance to investigate the alleged military-run 
torture camps at Chiadzwa which were exposed by BBC Panorama in August 2011.

Mugabe stands accused of applying the rule of law selectively, whereby 29 
opposition activists have been on remand in a maximum security prison for 
nearly a year for the alleged murder of a policeman, whereas six police 
officers accused of fatally assaulting a mineworker in Shamva were released 
on US$50 bail within a week.

In spite of these and other rights abuses, all opposition parties and their 
leaders have been ineffectual in getting Zanu-pf and Mugabe to observe the 
rule of law in its conventional sense.

Obviously, Mrs Pillay would be expected to also raise the issue of the SADC 
Tribunal which was arguably sabotaged by the Mugabe regime – to frustrate 
white commercial farmers from getting compensation.

Zimbabweans expect the international community to insist that the lifting of 
targeted sanctions on Mugabe and his allies be conditional on the holding of 
peaceful at least UN-supervised free and fair elections preceded by key 
reforms including security sector, media and electoral reforms, the 
revamping of the voters roll and the adoption of a new constitution in a 
peaceful referendum.

Although Mugabe cannot afford to alienate the United Nations entirely, he 
has however, carefully ‘cherry picked’ the priorities of any association 
with the world body.

For instance, the Zanu-pf leader has to date attended all annual General 
Assembly sessions in New York since the 1980s but expelled a UN torture 
expert, snubbed UN election funding, turned down UN food assistance in 2005 
and shot down Tibaijuka’s critical report on Murambatsvina.

The regime has also resisted opposition demands for a probe to ascertain the 
architects of the widely condemned Murambatsvina amidst revelations it was 
designed by the CIO. Instead, the regime embarked on a witch hunt.

Reports say prominent academic and publisher Dr Ibbo Mandaza was grilled on 
2 August 2005 by state security agents for allegedly writing the damning UN 
report on Operation Murambatsvina which exposed government to international 
criticism (Zimbabwe Independent, 07/10/05).

It remains to be seen how the regime will handle the UN rights envoy’s 
visit, her findings and recommendations. A question on every person’s mind 
is “Will there be victimisation after the UN envoy’s departure for blowing 
the whistle on Mugabe’s rights abuses?”

Clifford Chitupa Mashiri, Political Analyst, London, 
[email protected]

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