Thanks!
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From: Katila Pinto de Andrade
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2007 10:26 AM
Subject: FW: ZIMBABWE STATEMENT FOR SIGN ON
Dear Colleagues, Friends and Partner
As indicated earlier today please find hereunder the statement that we would like your support on. The statement will be run in a least one major newspaper in every country in the SADC region and at least 2 South African papers. What is required is that you mail your support to me (KatilaP@angola.osisa.org
14 March 2007 at 16h00. We are trying to get as many signatures onto the petition as possible so please also forward to as many people as possible.
We look forward to your support in the fight for democracy and respect for human rights.
The OSISA Team
Zimbabweans fight while SADC Watches in Silence: A Call to Action
We represent the many people within SADC who believe in lasting and democratic solutions to the crisis in Zimbabwe. We issue this open letter to all citizens of this region, and in particular to our heads of state and government, members of parliament in the respective countries and senior leaders within the SADC and African Union Secretariats to take urgent action to end the crisis in Zimbabwe.
We learned with shock and dismay of the Zimbabwe state's attack on its citizens on Sunday 11 March 2007 which resulted in the death of Gift Tandare. We are horrified to learn of the arrest and detention of dozens of civil society, church and opposition parties leaders at a peaceful prayer meeting that took place the same day. Their subsequent detention without access to legal counsel and appropriate medical attention is cause for great concern.
We are outraged that not a single state within SADC and the AU has issued a statement decrying the situation and calling for the restoration of, and respect for, human rights in Zimbabwe.
For almost a decade the people of Zimbabwe have suffered under the
unjust regime of Robert Mugabe and his ZANU-PF party. Freedom of
expression and assembly have been severely curtailed, virtually all
independent media outlets have been shut down, and thousands of people
have been dispossessed by an increasingly desperate party and its ruler.
For many years Zimbabwean activists have mounted protest actions and
demonstrations, and have made it clear to the world that they aspire to
live under a democratic dispensation. Using non-violent means, the
people of Zimbabwe have used all legitimate structures at their
disposal: the courts, their parliament and the media, with little or no
effect.
Today, in solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe, we, the people of this
region, must say that enough is enough. Our governments cannot continue
to ignore this situation. Millions of Zimbabweans are displaced and are
no longer able to live in their once prosperous nation. Millions more
within Zimbabwe are hungry, sick and unable to access basic services.
If action is not taken now at the highest levels, there will be blood on
the hands of all those states whose silence has aided and abetted
Mugabe¹s regime. The time for a softly-softly approach if there ever
was one is over.
Those who defend Mugabe imply that his opponents seek to overthrow the
Mugabe regime. This is simply untrue. We firmly believe that the
future of Zimbabwe lies in the hands of Zimbabweans themselves. The
future of Zimbabwe lies in national constitutional talks, in free and
fair elections and in a return to the respect of human rights
principles. The role of the regional and continental community is to
facilitate this process.
We therefore demand regional and continental intervention to ensure:
1. Freedom of assembly, expression, opinion and association are respected;
2. The media is allowed to operate freely;
3. That the looming humanitarian crisis that prevents Zimbabweans from
accessing basic social services including food security, health care,
water and sanitation, be averted.
We urgently call upon all heads of state and government in SADC to
ensure the following:
1. An independent investigation into the death of Gift Tandare on 11
March 2007 following the police shooting in Highfield;
2. The release from detention of all political detainees currently in
custody as a result of exercising their democratic rights to peaceful
protest on 11 March 2007;
3. Provision of quality medical attention to all those in custody;
4. Access to legal counsel by all those in custody;
5. Speedy resolution of this situation by the courts and compliance with
court orders by the police.
Furthermore, we insist that African governments to use bilateral and
multilateral means such as the SADC, African Union and the United
Nations to urgently appoint and dispatch a high-level team of eminent
persons to:
1. Assess the situation on the ground in order to prevent more shootings
and harm to the general public, and
2. Develop a sustainable and inclusive diplomatic solution to the crisis
which includes the hosting of inclusive talks.
NOW IS THE TIME TO ACT, THE FUTURE OF ZIMBABWE IS AT STAKE.
THE PEOPLE OF SADC
1. The Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa (OSISA)
2.
3.
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