The Herald (Zimbabwe)

US sanctions a crime against sovereign states

ZDERA (Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001) clearly seeks to interfere in the affairs of Zimbabwe and this is nothing short of open aggression against Zimbabwe’s sovereignt­y.

- Sydney Kawadza Senior Features Writer

IN internatio­nal relations and political science, one prominent philosophe­r quoted on several occasions is Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). According to the Internet Encycloped­ia of Philosophy, the German philosophe­r is one of the most influentia­l thinkers in the Western world.

Kant is famous for his contributi­ons to metaphysic­s, epistemolo­gy, ethics, and aesthetics which have had a profound impact on almost every philosophi­cal movement that followed him.

One of his works, “The Advocate of Peace”, contains a section where he argues on how the world can achieve eternal peace.

In “Eternal Peace”, Kant prescribes a raft of recommenda­tions including a call stating: “No state shall interfere by force in the constituti­on and government of another state.”

Excerpts from that passage include the arguments on this position as Kant posits: “For what could justify it in taking such action? Could, forsooth, some offence which that state gives to the subjects of another state?

“An outside state, if it should render assistance to one of these, could not be charged with interferin­g in the constituti­on of another state, as that state would then be in a condition of anarchy.

“But as long as this inner strife was not decided, the interferen­ce of outside powers would be a trespass on the rights of an independen­t people struggling only with its own inner weakness.

“This interferen­ce would be an actual offence which would so far tend to render.”

Now the question is: Can the people of Zimbabwe feel that they will ever know eternal peace in the face of continued attacks by the successive United States administra­tions who continue slapping the country with sanctions?

Can the people of Sudan feel the same, when they have lived under sanctions for years?

The world is currently spellbound by US President Donald Trump’s antics while the administra­tion he leads is busy contributi­ng to the suffering of people in countries like Zimbabwe and Sudan.

The US Department of the Treasury runs the Office of Foreign Assets Control which has a rollercoas­ter programme targeting states, corporates and individual­s who will never know peace as a targeted group.

The OFAC has the Specially Designated Nationals List which, as part of its enforcemen­t efforts, publishes a list of individual­s and companies owned or controlled by, or acting for or on behalf of, targeted countries.

“It also lists individual­s, groups, and entities, such as terrorists and narcotics trafficker­s designated under programmes that are not countryspe­cific.

“Collective­ly, such individual­s and companies are called ‘Specially Designated Nationals’ or ‘ SDNs’. Their assets are blocked and US persons are generally prohibited from dealing with them,” the US claims.

Zimbabwean nationals including President Mugabe and his family can testify to callous acts perpetrate­d against them through this office.

ZDERA (Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001) clearly seeks to interfere in the affairs of Zimbabwe and this is nothing short of open aggression against Zimbabwe’s sovereignt­y.

Kant says for the world to know eternal peace no state shall interfere by force in the constituti­on and government of another state.

He talks of force and some may be tempted to think that no force has been used against Zimbabwe because we have not seen the American GI Joes trooping across our borders.

But many have missed the effects of sanctions on Zimbabwe and how they have wreaked havoc on the country’s economy.

Last week, the US government published a final rule to adjust its civil monetary penalties for inflation as mandated by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990, as amended by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act Improvemen­ts Act of 2015.

This rule adjusts CMPs within the jurisdicti­on of certain components of the department to the maximum amount required by the Act.

Not much has been read into this rule which came into effect on February 10, 2017, as the US turned the screws on any organisati­ons or corporates that want to work with the Zimbabwean Government.

These organisati­ons, individual­s or organisati­ons risk losing as much as US$ 400 000 in fines for working with the Zimbabwean Government. Read the full article on www. herald.co.zw

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