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FILE - Police arrest a health worker during a protest against economic hardship and poor working conditions during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Harare, Zimbabwe, July 6, 2020. |
HARARE, ZIMABABWE - The United Nations Human Rights Office says it is “concerned” by a new Human Rights Watch report that says Zimbabwe’s government is using the COVID-19 pandemic as a pretext to clamp down on freedom of expression and freedom of peaceful assembly and association.
Marta Hurtado, spokeswoman of the U.N. Human
Rights Office, said the agency is encouraging President Emmerson
Mnangagwa’s government to engage with civil society and other stakeholders to
find sustainable solutions to grievances, while ensuring that people’s rights
and freedoms are protected in accordance with Zimbabwe’s human rights
obligations.
“We are indeed concerned at allegations that suggest that
the Zimbabwean authorities may be using the COVID-19 pandemic as a pretext to
clamp down on freedom of expression and freedom of peaceful assembly and
association," Hurtado said. "Merely calling for a peaceful protest or
participating in a peaceful protest are an exercise of recognized human rights.
An example of intimidation is the repeated arbitrary arrest and detention of
three members of the main opposition party for taking part in a protest.”
That is an apparent reference to three female opposition
activists who were arrested in May for protesting the Zimbabwe
government’s failure to provide payouts during a lockdown to contain the
coronavirus. They now face two more charges - all related to breaking lockdown
regulations.
On Thursday, HRW released a report chronicling how
23 African governments are using the COVID-19 pandemic to clamp down on freedom
of the media and of assembly.
On Friday, Cecillia Chimbiri - one of the three
female opposition activists mentioned in the HRW report - welcomed
the U.N. Human Rights Office’s statement on Zimbabwe. She maintains the
trio’s innocence and wants Zimbabwe government look after its citizens during
lockdowns.
“The demo was simply to say: people are hungry, what are you
doing as the government of Zimbabwe, people are unemployed, Zimbabweans live
hand to mouth? We are law-abiding citizens," she told media. " Speaking
against the government doesn’t make us unpatriotic. We love our
country that’s why we are speaking against any injustices and any
inequalities that are existing. We did not commit any crime. We are not
criminals. They are trying to tarnish our images, this is what this government
is doing, to clampdown voices, to make sure they continue doing that (abuses).”
On Wednesday, Elasto Mugwadi, the head of the
government-affiliated Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission, confirmed to media that
his organization had received complaints of abuses raised in the HRW report. He
said the complaints included “robust approach in enforcement by the police” and
“generally excessive enforcement.”
Mugwadi said the commission was investigating the
complaints of abuses during the lockdown by the Zimbabwe government
to contain coronavirus.
“While recognizing the government’s efforts to contain the
pandemic, it is important to remind the authorities that any restrictions
should be necessary, proportionate and time-limited, and enforced humanely
without resorting to unnecessary or excessive force," Hurtado said.
The HRW report, Covid-19 Triggers Wave of Free Speech
Abuse, said the rights group was concerned about introduction
of Zimbabwe’s Public Health Order Act in March, which threatened
up to 20 years in prison for fake news on public health
matters.
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