The Citizen (KZN)

‘Bring back tribunal’

SADC: 40M CITIZENS ‘DENIED ACCESS TO JUSTICE’ AFTER IT WAS DISBANDED Concern over erosion of human rights in community.

- Zanele Mbengo zanelem@citizen.co.za

Civil society organisati­ons and cultural communitie­s are rallying for the reinstatem­ent of the secretaria­t of the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) Tribunal.

The call comes amid concerns over the erosion of justice and human rights within the SADC countries.

The tribunal was a court and the highest policy institutio­n of the SADC. Its mandate included ensuring “adherence to and the proper interpreta­tion of the provisions of the SADC Treaty”.

The Mike Campbell Foundation, the Mthwakazi Republic Party, the Southern African Agri Initiative (Saai), AfriForum and the Office of Kgosi Mogakolodi Masibi of the Batlharo Boo Tokwana Ba Ga Masibi cultural community yesterday sent a memorandum to the SADC to call for the restoratio­n of the tribunal.

Theo de Jager, executive board chair of Saai, said the initiative was to put pressure on the government­s to revive this tribunal.

De Jager said it was the first time in SADC’s history that civil society with non-political structures had launched such an effort.

“We need the internatio­nal community to play its part to ensure compensati­on is paid to the white Zimbabwean farmers who have still not been compensate­d for the land which they have title deeds to and from which they were violently evicted,” he added.

The representa­tives signed this memorandum at the historic Turnhalle Building, Windhoek, the former seat of the tribunal, as a symbol of their appeal to SADC.

The symbolic signing was the final step of a two-stage trek undertaken by Ben Freeth, executive director of the Mike Campbell Foundation, which began at the gate of the farm Mount Carmel in central Zimbabwe on 28 November last year.

Mogakolodi Masibi, king of the Batlharo Boo Tokwana Ba Ga Masibi, said cultural communitie­s in rural Southern Africa were in dire need of developmen­t and key to developmen­t was investment.

Masibi said human rights were important and “the so-called democracie­s of this world, including our country, South Africa, are expensive when it comes to justice”.

“We support restoratio­n of the SADC Tribunal, as it will send a message to potential donors, investors and the internatio­nal community that the government­s of SADC are truly committed to the rule of law,” he added.

According to the statement,

Mike Campbell and Freeth had received confirmati­on from the Zimbabwean government in 1999, stating it had no interest in acquiring Campbell’s farm, Mount Carmel, for its land redistribu­tion programme.

But two years later, Campbell was issued with an eviction notice as part of the government’s programme of expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

Campbell and Freeth took the matter to the SADC Tribunal, which ruled in their favour and found actions taken by the Zimbabwean government were in violation of the SADC’s human rights principles.

However, the Zimbabwean government ignored the ruling, and the farm was invaded in 2009.

Freeth said the court of justice was open to any SADC citizens whose justice systems had failed them in their own countries.

“The effective closure of the

tribunal was a travesty of justice that has denied access to justice to the 400 million citizens of the 16 SADC countries,” Freeth said.

Ayesha Kajee, political analyst and research fellow at Afrasid, said the tribunal was effectivel­y disbanded due to connivance between former presidents Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe and Jacob Zuma of SA. They contrived to change the protocol in 2014, to only hear interstate disputes, removing citizens’ right to bring a case.

“The importance of restoring it means giving that right to bring cases to the tribunal, back to the citizens.

“The big question is whether the tribunal would have enforcemen­t teeth?

“Internatio­nal solidarity is critical. We saw that in the South African fight against apartheid and we are seeing it again with Gaza,” Kajee said.

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