Source: Human Rights Watch
Dispatches: A Birthday Wish for Mugabe
Dewa Mavhinga
On Saturday, Zimbabwe’s president, Robert Mugabe, will celebrate his
91st birthday in lavish style. Two elephants, two buffaloes, a lion, two
sables, and five impalas are to be slaughtered for the feast in the
resort town of Victoria Falls, according to state media.
The president, in power for nearly 35 years, is also likely to be
enjoying a gift from the European Union. Earlier this week the EU
announced it would resume development aid to Zimbabwe after 12 years of
sanctions. Mugabe and his wife will still face travel bans and frozen
bank accounts, but the aid package of €237 million sets a new tone for
Zimbabwe’s relations with donors.
While important for ordinary Zimbabweans who desperately need the
healthcare, agriculture, and good governance assistance the EU aid
package promises to bring, it should also come with a clear message:
respect for human rights is non-negotiable.
Zimbabwe’s track record on human rights is, of course, abysmal.
The 2008 elections were marred by political violence and vote-rigging.
Zimbabwe’s military, state security agents, and supporters of Mugabe’s
ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) killed at least 200 opposition supporters and beat and tortured 5, 000 others. To date, almost no one has been held to account.
Attacks against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people
are common, yet the authorities take little action. Mugabe, who has a
long history of making homophobic remarks, again said in July 2014 that
LGBT citizens are “worse than dogs and pigs” and threatened to behead
them. State campaigns against civil society activists and journalists
who criticize the government and the desperate economic situation also
continue.
Implementation of some reforms, including the enactment of a new
constitution in May 2013, may have encouraged the EU to pursue a new
policy of gradual re-engagement. The constitution includes some strong
rights provisions, though so far Mugabe’s government has failed to
implement them.
But the EU aid package will need to be closely monitored to avoid money
being siphoned off by corrupt government officials. A recent Human
Rights Watch report
documented the Zimbabwe government’s misuse of humanitarian assistance
to coerce some 20, 000 flood victims from the Tokwe-Mukorsi dam basin to
accept a derisory resettlement package. The EU will need to prevent
similar misuse of aid.
The government should take the EU aid package as an incentive to fully
implement the constitution, work toward sustainable economic development
that improves people’s lives, and abide by Zimbabwe’s international
legal obligations. Good governance, the rule of law, and respect for
human rights are not ideas imposed by Western donors, but are an
entitlement of all Zimbabweans. This government, and future ones, should
recognize that.