End Zim squeeze, EU told
JOHANNESBURG – South Africa’s International Relations and Cooperation Minister Lindiwe Sisulu has called on the European Union (EU) to give the Zimbabwean government and its people a chance to start afresh.
She has called on the EU to urgently lift sanctions ahead of South Africa’s bi-national meeting with Zimbabwe next month.
“I thought by now sanctions imposed on the Zimbabwe government and its people would be lifted to enable the country to start afresh after all the challenges they have gone through.
“We call on the EU, and particularly the United Kingdom, to give the government and the people of Zimbabwe a chance to change their situation by urgently lifting the sanctions,” Sisulu said at a briefing after meeting members of the diplomatic corps in Tshwane on Tuesday.
The EU imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe in 2000 after former President Robert Mugabe was accused of trampling on human rights, rigging elections and repressing press freedom - accusations that he denied. The sanctions led to devastating economic challenges. The country has an 85 percent unemployment rate, News24 reported earlier.
Sanctions were extended after allegations that President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administration deployed soldiers to fire live ammunition at unarmed protesters, followed by a series of human rights abuses.
This came after nationwide protests over a steep increase in fuel prices. A litre of petrol there is the most expensive in the world.
“The escalation of violence in Zimbabwe over recent days has been aggravated by the disproportionate use of force by security personnel,” European Commission spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic said in a statement.
In her statement, Sisulu expressed concern about how the sanctions would affect Zimbabwe’s chances at addressing its economic challenges.