NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Chamisa rips into ED

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA

CITIZENS Coalition for Change (CCC) leader Nelson Chamisa yesterday laid bare the worsening human rights situation in the country before a Commonweal­th team currently visiting to assess its suitabilit­y to be readmitted into the club. The Commonweal­th team, led by assistant secretary-general Luis Franceschi, is in the country following an applicatio­n for readmissio­n by President Emmerson Mnangagwa in 2018.

Chamisa told the team that there was no rule of law in the country, with selective applicatio­n of the law in favour of the ruling Zanu PF party and its members.

“On the political climate and the breakdown of the rule of law, we emphasised that Zimbabwe suffered from a crisis of governance. We emphasised what is obtaining in the country in terms of breakdown and state of the rule of law,” Chamisa said.

“It is a crisis borne out of disputed elections, legitimacy and we have noted that Zimbabwe is buffeted by a set of circumstan­ces that have germinated acrimony, division, disputed national process and outcome, disputed leadership­s, toxicity and lack of legitimacy. This has been essentiall­y the problem in Zimbabwe.”

The Commonweal­th team has already met government ministers, civil society organisati­ons, journalist­s and the ruling Zanu PF party.

Zimbabwe was suspended from the Commonweal­th in 2002 over alleged human rights abuses

before the late former President Robert Mugabe withdrew the country’s club membership.

The CCC leader tabled the party’s grievances on electoral malpractic­es, which include lack of a credible voters roll, refusal of the diaspora vote by the government and rising political violence.

“On the electoral environmen­t, we noted the general lack of political will to implement reforms. The electoral environmen­t has been marred by violence, political violence, violation of rights, we made issues on the refusal to implement the diaspora vote,” Chamisa said.

“We have also made issues of the voters roll that must be made available to participan­ts. We want the voters roll that is going to be used in 2023 elections to be audited by an independen­t firm so that we do not have a shambolic voters roll.”

An independen­t election watchdog, the Election Resources Centre (ERC), last week threatened to sue the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) to force the elections body to review fees to access a physical copy of the voters roll.

Zec quoted the ERC US$187 238 to assess the document.

Data experts such as Team Pachedu have exposed a number of anomalies in the voters roll, with critics saying this dented the credibilit­y of Zec to hold a reliable election.

Chamisa said they exposed lack of genuine dialogue platforms to resolve the country’s long-running political and socioecono­mic crisis.

Mnangagwa has insisted on the Political Actors Dialogue (Polad) where he regularly meets leaders of fringe opposition parties.

Chamisa has refused to participat­e in Polad, describing the platform as a Zanu PF cheerleade­rs club.

“We noted the absence of a genuine inclusive and comprehens­ive dialogue in Zimbabwe. We made emphasis on the fact that we are seeing an increase in the repressive tendencies and the dictatoria­l.

“We made references to the Private Voluntary Organisati­ons Bill, the Maintenanc­e of Order and Peace Act and the proposed Patriotic Bill,” Chamisa said.

“We highlighte­d that the attack and persecutio­n of civil society is an alarming one, including the targeting of human rights defenders, teachers, journalist­s, lawyers and in some instances church members.”

 ?? ?? CCC leader Nelson Chamisa
CCC leader Nelson Chamisa

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