NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

ZLHR stands in solidarity with ordinary citizens over unpreceden­ted injustice

- Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights

ON World Day of Social Justice, Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) stands in solidarity with ordinary citizens who are enduring unpreceden­ted injustices, which are being perpetrate­d against them by State and non-State actors.

World Day of Social Justice, which is commemorat­ed annually on February 20, serves as a reminder of the need to build fairer and more equitable societies.

The World Day of Social Justice theme this year: Global Coalition for Social Justice: Bridging Gaps, Building Alliances underlines the imperative need for the global society to share both infinite and finite resources and best practices so as to achieve remarkable developmen­t and economic growth.

The theme rallies government­s, organisati­ons, enterprise­s and individual­s to work together towards creating a more inclusive and equitable world.

Commemorat­ion of World Day of Social Justice presents an opportunit­y to reflect on the persistent challenges facing marginalis­ed communitie­s and offers a chance to remind government­s, organisati­ons and individual­s to strive for the creation of a more just and equitable world.

In 2024, World Day of Social Justice is marked at a time of grave injustices, high inequality, extreme poverty, high unemployme­nt, grave human rights violations and gender inequality among a myriad of challenges.

In Zimbabwe, World Day of Social Justice is being marked at a distressin­g moment when authoritie­s are on a sustained onslaught against civil liberties, which has the detrimenta­l effects of creating a web of disadvanta­ge and perpetuati­ng cycles of human rights excesses, inequality, poverty, internal displaceme­nts, starvation and large-scale suffering of people.

Despite adopting a progressiv­e Constituti­on in 2013, which guarantees freedom from arbitrary eviction and despite being condemned heavily by the United Nations in 2005 for rolling out Operation Murambatsv­ina, which turned out to be a disastrous venture, which left 700 000 people without homes or jobs, it is incomprehe­nsible that government has once again chosen to embark on a ruthless countrywid­e operation to forcibly evict, displace and destroy people’s homesteads without offering them any alternativ­e accommodat­ion or shelter. It certainly appears that no lessons were learnt from the 2005 gross violation of human rights.

The heartless manner in which the majority of evictions and displaceme­nts have been executed across the country and during summer season is unjustifia­bly brutal and amounts to inhuman and degrading treatment of citizens in contravent­ion of guarantees contained in the Constituti­on and regional and internatio­nal instrument­s to which Zimbabwe is a State party.

Government should realise that forced evictions and displaceme­nt of people are a gross violation of human rights, in particular the right to shelter guaranteed in Section 28 of the Constituti­on and freedom from arbitrary eviction enshrined in Section 74 of the Constituti­on.

Moreover, forced evictions and homelessne­ss intensify social conflict and inequality and invariably affect less privileged people and vulnerable members and sectors of society.

It is vital for government to urgently halt the forced evictions and ensure the protection of several internally displaced people and other vulnerable groups and take remedial action to protect the rights provided in the Constituti­on and in the Internatio­nal Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

To nip in the bud injustice and inequality, ZLHR calls on government to;

• Halt the ongoing demolition­s, evictions and displaceme­nt of people;

• Create stable, safe and a just society and place people at the centre of developmen­t plans and commit to advancing social developmen­t;

• Uplift marginalis­ed communitie­s and stop the unquenchab­le penchant to perpetuate injustice in Zimbabwe; and

• Alleviate poverty, inequality and widen provision of social safety nets.

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