NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim yet to taste independen­ce

- Viola

THE Zanu PF-led government has continued to violate human rights. Its crackdown on human rights and opposition activists, including the continued eviction of people from urban and rural settlement­s using State resources and agents such as the Zimbabwe Republic Police is testimony to this.

Budiriro residents whose houses were demolished are the latest victims. Zimbabwe should not be considered independen­t for the following reasons:

Although the country is supposed to be governed by the Constituti­on, President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s regime’s intolerant and authoritar­ian rule does not adhere to the tenets of the supreme law. An autocratic regime does not guarantee prosperity, poverty reduction and observance of human rights.

The media, civic groups, human rights activists and ordinary people are not allowed to criticise the government and if they do they are labelled “sellouts” and brutalised as a consequenc­e.

There are no free and fair elections, freedoms of speech and expression are limited and violence by State security agents is sanctioned by the government on dissenting voices.

Elections are won by the ruling Zanu PF party by the use of unfair means as witnessed in 2018.

Civic organisati­on meetings and demonstrat­ions are declared illegal on the pretext of observing the COVID19-induced lockdown regulation­s.

Politicall­y-motivated violence such as murders and disappeara­nces, intimidati­on, harassment of opposition supporters and intoleranc­e of dissent are endemic during the run-up to elections.

In light of this, it is clear that Zimbabwe does not have a universall­y acceptable democratic framework and Zimbabwean­s have had no experience of democracy during and after white minority rule.

 ??  ?? President Emmerson Mnangagwa
President Emmerson Mnangagwa

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