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"Our Hands Are Tied" Erosion of the Rule of Law in Zimbabwe – Nov
“Our Hands Are Tied” Erosion of the Rule of Law in Zimbabwe Copyright © 2008 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 1-56432-404-4 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch 350 Fifth Avenue, 34th floor New York, NY 10118-3299 USA Tel: +1 212 290 4700, Fax: +1 212 736 1300 [email protected] Poststraße 4-5 10178 Berlin, Germany Tel: +49 30 2593 06-10, Fax: +49 30 2593 0629 [email protected] Avenue des Gaulois, 7 1040 Brussels, Belgium Tel: + 32 (2) 732 2009, Fax: + 32 (2) 732 0471 [email protected] 64-66 Rue de Lausanne 1202 Geneva, Switzerland Tel: +41 22 738 0481, Fax: +41 22 738 1791 [email protected] 2-12 Pentonville Road, 2nd Floor London N1 9HF, UK Tel: +44 20 7713 1995, Fax: +44 20 7713 1800 [email protected] 27 Rue de Lisbonne 75008 Paris, France Tel: +33 (1)43 59 55 35, Fax: +33 (1) 43 59 55 22 [email protected] 1630 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 500 Washington, DC 20009 USA Tel: +1 202 612 4321, Fax: +1 202 612 4333 [email protected] Web Site Address: http://www.hrw.org November 2008 1-56432-404-4 “Our Hands Are Tied” Erosion of the Rule of Law in Zimbabwe I. Summary ............................................................................................................... 1 II. Recommendations ............................................................................................... 5 To the Future Government of Zimbabwe .............................................................. 5 To the Chief Justice ............................................................................................ 6 To the Office of the Attorney General .................................................................. 6 To the Commissioner General of the Zimbabwe Republic Police .......................... 6 To the Southern African Development Community and the African Union ........... -
Zimbabwe: Time for a New Approach
Zimbabwe: time for a new approach September 2011 Report of the International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) Supported by the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa (OSISA) This report has been compiled in accordance with the Lund – London Guidelines 2009 (www.factfindingguidelines.org) Material contained in this report may be freely quoted or reprinted, provided credit is given to the International Bar Association International Bar Association 4th Floor, 10 St Bride Street London EC4A 4AD, United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)20 7842 0090 Fax: +44 (0)20 7842 0091 Website: www.ibanet.org Contents Glossary of Acronyms 5 Executive Summary 7 Introduction 9 The mission 10 Section One: The Global Political Agreement 11 Historical background, context and results 11 Material contained in this report may be freely quoted or reprinted, provided credit is given to the International Bar Association Political participation and preparations for the next elections 15 The constitutional review process 19 Section Two: Rule Of Law 24 Independence and needs of the judiciary 24 The Attorney-General 27 Prosecutions for crimes committed in relation to the 2008 elections 29 Continuing selective application of the rule of law 30 National reconciliation 33 Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission 37 Section Three: The Extractive Industries 39 Human rights concerns 40 International Bar Association 4th Floor, 10 St Bride Street Relocation of local inhabitants from Marange to Arda Transau 41 London EC4A 4AD, United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)20 7842 0090 Fax: +44 -
Problems Mount on Copac's Outreach Programme
Defending free expression and your right to know The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe Monday August 30th – Sunday September 5th 2010 Weekly Media Review 2010-34 Contents 1. Top stories of the week 2. The media’s loudest voices 3. Human rights abuses Top stories of the week The visit by international music icons – US-based R&B singer Akon and his Jamaican Ragga counterpart, Sean Paul – as part of government efforts to rebrand the country’s battered image, hogged media limelight at the end of the week. But it was the crisis-ridden Constitutional Parliamentary Committee (Copac)’s consultation programme, bedevilled by funding and operational problems, which still received most publicity in both the government and private media during the week. Poor service delivery, especially by local government authorities and state-run companies, attracted significant media attention too. Fig. 1 illustrates this. Fig 1: Top stories in the media Media Akon/Sean Constitutional Poor service Labour Human Paul musical reforms delivery unrest rights show Public 22 30 26 7 2 Media Private 19 24 14 3 21 Media Total 41 54 40 10 23 Problems mount on Copac’s outreach programme News of the alleged reluctance by donors to fund the additional 25 days of the constitutional outreach programme marked the latest controversy to dog Zimbabwe’s constitution-making process in the week. But the media inadequately handled this development by largely failing to shine light on why the donors had rebuffed financing the extension of the exercise. Neither did they clear the confusion over the real reasons behind the extension given Copac’s controversial announcement in the week that it had allocated only two days for the outreach exercise in Harare and Bulawayo after initially giving the impression that the additional 25 days were mainly to accommodate the outreach programme in the two cities. -
ZIMBABWE COUNTRY of ORIGIN INFORMATION (COI) REPORT COI Service
ZIMBABWE COUNTRY OF ORIGIN INFORMATION (COI) REPORT COI Service 25 March 2011 ZIMBABWE 25 MARCH 2011 Contents Preface Latest News EVENTS IN ZIMBABWE FROM 22 FEBRUARY 2011 TO 24 MARCH 2011 Useful news sources for further information REPORTS ON ZIMBABWE PUBLISHED OR ACCESSED BETWEEN 22 FEBRUARY 2011 AND 24 MARCH 2011 Paragraphs Background Information 1. GEOGRAPHY ............................................................................................................ 1.01 Public holidays ..................................................................................................... 1.06 Map ........................................................................................................................ 1.07 2. ECONOMY ................................................................................................................ 2.01 Remittances .......................................................................................................... 2.06 Sanctions .............................................................................................................. 2.08 3. HISTORY (19TH CENTURY TO 2008)............................................................................. 3.01 Matabeleland massacres 1983 - 87 ..................................................................... 3.03 Political events: late 1980s - 2007...................................................................... 3.06 Events in 2008 - 2010 ........................................................................................... 3.23 -
Faculty of Humanities, Development and Social
FACULTY OF HUMANITIES, DEVELOPMENT AND SOCIAL SCIENCES SADC MEDIATION IN ZIMBABWE: LOST OPPORTUNITY FOR LASTING SOLUTION TO THE ZIMBABWE CRISIS By Petra Rumbidzai Chinyere Student No: 217077803 Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree, Doctor of Philosophy in Conflict Transformation and Peace Studies, School of Social Sciences University of KwaZulu-Natal, Howard College Campus, Durban. Supervisor: Dr. Rudigi Rukema Joseph SEPTEMBER 2020 DECLARATION I, Ms Petra R. Chinyere, declare as follows: 1. That the work described in this thesis has not been submitted to UKZN or other tertiary institution for purposes of obtaining an academic qualification, whether by myself or any other party. 2. That my contribution to the project was as follows: - The write up of the whole thesis. - Documentary search and all desk work. - Conducting all of the key informant interviews and all one-on-one interviews and also some of the Focus Group Discussions - All the transcription of audio recordings to typed work for data capture. - Funded the field research on my own as it was purely for academic purposes. 3. That the contributions of others to the project were as follows: - Norman Pinduka conducted one (1) focus group discussion in Harare and assisted partly on data capture as he transcribed the focus group discussion that he conducted. He also helped identify some of the respondents to the in-depth interviews that were conducted. - Tarisayi Chiyaka conducted 3 of the focus group discussions during data collection, in Bulawayo, Gweru and Masvingo. - Kilbride Kajengo did the type setting of the whole document and formatting. Signed Date 25-09-2020. -
What Happened in Parliament? an Analysis of the Participation of Mps 2012 to 2013
What happened in Parliament? An analysis of the participation of MPs 2012 to 2013 Rumbidzai Dube, Senior Researcher November 2013 1. Executive Summary This report is the last of a three part series of thematic reports analysing the performance of the Seventh Parliament in the last year of its tenure. While the previous two reports assessed the aspects of the Seventh Parliament to do with attendance and gender; this last offering looks specifically at the achievements of Parliament , with particular regard to issues such as Bills passed, debates undertaken and legislative performance in general. The report notes, among other things, that: • The levels of participation and debate among Parliamentarians were generally low, with some members spending the entire year without contributing anything to pertinent discussions; • Although most ministers impressively managed to participate in either House of Assembly or Senate sessions, at least two-thirds of the ZANU PF ministers never participated in either the House of Assembly or Senate sessions, a worrying trend considering that they have held ministerial positions for longer; • Question and Answer sessions – an important process in Parliament- were characterised by poor attendance by Ministers. Some Ministers tactfully side-stepped important questions. Some members addressed questions to the wrong Ministries. In some instances, procedural considerations in the conduct of the business of Parliament resulted in some questions remaining unanswered up to the end of the Seventh Parliament; • The -
Govt Has Failed on Key Reforms-Tsvangirai
15 March 2010 Edition 36 Govt has failed on key reforms-Tsvangirai HARARE-Prime Minister Morgan crisis by ending politically motivated arrests, Tsvangirai has admitted that the transitional prosecutions, seizures of white-owned farms, coalition government has failed to institute media censorship as well as drafting a new significant democratic reforms more than a constitution and holding new elections under year after its establishment. international supervision and monitoring. Tsvangirai formed a transitional unity But a year after its establishment, Tsvangirai government with President Robert Mugabe conceded that implementation of democratic after signing an Interparty Political reforms has been sluggish. Agreement (IPA) which was expected to usher in a new phase in his decade-long “Indeed, as a government, we have not yet made struggle against Mugabe’s rule. the types of progress or democratic reforms which were the very reason for entering into The decision to establish the inclusive this new administration,” Tsvangirai disclosed government came after many influential in a keynote address at the launch of a Crisis leaders in southern Africa pushed for a in Zimbabwe Coalition (CZC) report entitled power-sharing arrangement in response to “Cries from Goromonzi: Inside Zimbabwe’s an election their own monitors concluded Torture Chambers”. was neither free nor fair. Tsvangirai’s disclosure is in tandem with a recent The coalition government committed brutal assessment carried out by the Civil Society itself to resolving a decade-long -
Zimbabwe: the Road to Reform Or Another Dead End?
ZIMBABWE: THE ROAD TO REFORM OR ANOTHER DEAD END? Africa Report N°173 – 27 April 2011 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS ................................................. i I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................. 1 II. DEVELOPMENTS UNDER THE INCLUSIVE GOVERNMENT ............................. 2 A. GPA REFORM PROGRESS ............................................................................................................. 3 B. OUTSTANDING ISSUES .................................................................................................................. 6 C. RE-RUN OF THE 2008 ELECTION VIOLENCE? ................................................................................ 8 III. CONSTITUTION-MAKING ......................................................................................... 11 A. GPA PROVISIONS AND INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS ........................................................... 11 B. FUNDING .................................................................................................................................... 12 C. ALL-STAKEHOLDERS CONFERENCE ............................................................................................ 12 D. KEY ISSUES ................................................................................................................................ 13 1. Executive authority ................................................................................................................... -
ZIMBABWE COUNTRY of ORIGIN INFORMATION (COI) REPORT COI Service
ZIMBABWE COUNTRY OF ORIGIN INFORMATION (COI) REPORT COI Service 13 July 2012 ZIMBABWE 13 JULY 2012 Contents Preface Latest News EVENTS IN ZIMBABWE FROM 7 JUNE 2012 TO 13 JULY 2012 Useful news sources for further information REPORTS ON ZIMBABWE PUBLISHED OR ACCESSED BETWEEN 7 JUNE AND 13 JULY 2012 Paragraphs Background Information 1. GEOGRAPHY ............................................................................................................ 1.01 Public holidays ..................................................................................................... 1.06 Map ........................................................................................................................ 1.07 2. ECONOMY ................................................................................................................ 2.01 Remittances .......................................................................................................... 2.12 Military involvement in the economy ................................................................. 2.17 Sanctions .............................................................................................................. 2.18 3. HISTORY (19TH CENTURY TO 2010) ............................................................................. 3.01 Matabeleland massacres 1983 - 87 (aka ‘Gurkurahundi’) ................................. 3.03 ZANU-PF win 1990s elections ............................................................................. 3.07 Land reform and War Veterans: 1990-97 ........................................................... -
Zimbabwe Domestic Broadcasting (22 March – 28 March, 2011) By
Zimbabwe Domestic Broadcasting (22 March – 28 March, 2011) By Zuzia Danielski, MIGS media monitor for Zimbabwe State-owned Media “Anti-sanctions campaign a success: Zanu-PF” (Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, government-owned broadcasting, 22 March 2011, in English) - The Zanu-PF hailed the launch of the Anti-Sanction Petition campaign in 10 provinces this past weekend as a success. Zanu-PF Secretary for Information and Publicity, Rugare Gumbo, said the overwhelming turnout ensures that two million signatures will be reached. “MDC snubs MDC-T” (Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, government-owned broadcasting, 23 March 2011, in English) - Allegations of bribery have arisen as the MDC-T tries to convince MDC members to elect Lovemore Moyo as Speaker in Parliament. - Sources in the MDC-T told ZBC that the group approached Ncube‟s MDC with cash in an attempt to influence their vote, but the legislators refused. “Biti finally meets war vets” (Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, government-owned broadcasting, 24 March 2011, in English) - Finance Minister Tendai Biti „swallowed his pride‟ and met with war veterans, promising to pay their children‟s school fees within days, as owed by the government. - Representatives of the veterans still expressed disappointment that their pensions would not be raised. The Minister said there was no money for this, however government revenue has increased after the sale of diamonds. “Dethroned Speaker Moyo barred from Parly” by Zvamaida Murwira (The Herald, government-owned daily, 24 March 2011, in English) - The Clerk of Parliament stated that former Speaker Lovemore Moyo would be barred from attending the new Speaker‟s election. Austin Zvoma told The Herald that „adequate measures‟ would be in place when Parliament resumed to ensure that Moyo would not vote, even though he is eligible to still stand as a candidate. -
The Constitutional History and the 2013 Referendum of Zimbabwe a NORDEM Special Report Editor: Karin Lisa Kirkengen
The Constitutional History and the 2013 Referendum of Zimbabwe A NORDEM SPECIAL REPORT 2013 2013 REPORT A NORDEM SPECIAL Zimbabwe of Referendum 2013 the History and Constitutional The The Author The Constitutional History and the 2013 Kåre Vollan is the director and owner of the company Quality AS. He has been working on elections in thirty countries and territories including Nepal, Kenya, Referendum of Zimbabwe Iraq, Palestine, Sudan, Egypt, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Zimbabwe. He has since 2006 provided advice to the Election Commission and politicians in Nepal, in particular on the group representation system. From 1999 to 2000, Vollan was the Deputy Head of the OSCE mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina, organising two elections. In the period from 1996 to 2009 he headed twelve A NORDEM SPECIAL REPORT 2013 OSCE/ODIHR and NORDEM election observation missions or teams. From 2003 he has issued opinions on election laws for the Council of Europe Venice Commission. Vollan, who is an applied mathematician by profession, has published a number of articles and reports on electoral and decision making issues. NORDEM NORDEM, the Norwegian Resource Bank for Democracy and Human Rights, is a civilian capacity provider specialised in human rights and democratisation. NORDEM’s main objective is to enhance the capacity of international organisations working in these fields. NORDEM’s expertise includes good governance, institution building, rule of law, human rights monitoring, elections and other related fields. NORDEM has for two decades provided Norwegian observers to international election observation missions. NORDEM also develops election related trainings and hosts various election management body or parliamentary delegations, mainly from countries in political transition. -
State of the Media Report 2006
MISA-Zimbabwe ___________________________________________________________________ State of the Media Report 2006 In the Report: Introduction Media Environment Print Media Broadcasting Telecommunications Media Violations Statistics: 2006 1 Introduction – 2006 socio-political environment Zimbabwe’s unmitigated socio-economic and political meltdown riding on the back of a hyper-inflationary environment continued in a year, during which the ruling Zanu PF government employed desperate measures to cling to power amid growing disaffection with its mismanagement of the once vibrant economy. The country’s current woes took root when the government embarked on a controversial land reform programme six years ago. Since then, the economy has continued on its downward spiral amid projections that inflation could rise to 3 000 percent during the first quarter of 2007. Shortages of basic commodities such as fuel, electricity, water cuts, cooking oil, sugar and drugs spawned by acute shortages of foreign currency characterised the worsening economic hardships during the year 2006 as the government resorted to knee-jerk fire fighting in an attempt to bandage the open wounds of its skewed macro-economic policies. The government’s Look East policy drafted in the wake of targeted Western sanctions against ruling Zanu PF and government officials failed to create the touted economic growth and wealth through meaningful direct foreign investment as unemployment remained pegged at more than 80 percent. The poverty datum line for an average family of six was pegged at US$ 834 in November 2006 in a country where the average monthly wage is about Z$ 37 500 (US$ 150), making it the lowest in the Southern African Development Community and way below the Poverty Datum Line (PDL)1.