Categories: Stories

What British Lords said about the Zimbabwe by-elections of 26 March

As we look forward in this grim situation, we take into consideration the opportunities for further dialogue, either within or alongside the Commonwealth and the CHOGM meeting in Rwanda or in an open process of facilitated dialogue. However, the Government need to recognise that our leverage and moral position for the people of Zimbabwe has been dramatically harmed by, as my noble friend Lord Oates indicated, the gruesome cuts to overseas development assistance to them from the people of the United Kingdom, which fell from £189 million pre-Covid in 2019-20—that included £69 million of health support—to £18 million, with no money for health support.

If we are looking for freedom of expression and in electoral processes and the implementation of the law, we must ensure that the people of Zimbabwe are supported. Therefore, an immediate return to  0.7% and an immediate restoration of support for the people of Zimbabwe are necessary from this Government.

17:13:00

Lord Collins of Highbury (Lab)

My Lords, I, too, thank the noble Lord, Lord Oates, for initiating this debate and for his excellent introduction. As he rightly says, it is for the people of Zimbabwe to determine their own future, but continued violations of human rights, including impediments to free and fair elections, remain a significant barrier to their ability to determine that future for themselves. It is also a significant barrier to the country’s role in the international rules-based order. In the period leading up to the March elections, there were repeated reports of state interference to disrupt the electoral process. Unfortunately, this forms part of a much wider undermining of democracy in recent years.

The noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, mentioned the important role of civil society, which we have focused on in previous debates on Zimbabwe. Civil society, including trade unions, has continued to be the subject of harsh repression from state authorities. The wave of political arrests has led to a number of activists and opposition politicians going into hiding. This is all in addition to President Mnangagwa’s use of the Covid-19 pandemic as a pretext for even further harassment and disregard of due legal process, with no accountability for those responsible.

While I hear what the noble Lord, Lord Alderdice, says, I believe the UK Government have been right to implement sanctions in response, including asset freezes, arms embargoes and travel bans. The Minister has our full support in doing so, but there is a case for the Government to review and monitor the effect of these sanctions, particularly on how we might work more effectively with our allies to review their implementation and effectiveness. It is also welcome that the British embassy in Harare continues to engage with civil society groups and certainly important that Ministers make representations directly to Zimbabwean officials over their treatment.

Human rights defenders and civil society organisations are, of course, facing unprecedented restrictions and abuse in every region of the world. In recognition of this, the UK committed in the Government’s integrated review of security, defence, development and foreign policy to work with human rights defenders and civil society as a priority action of the “force for good” agenda. At the G7 in 2021, they also committed to address “the closure of civic space” and “to work collectively to strengthen the foundations of open societies, promote human rights and inclusive connectivity”.

What progress has been made on developing a meaningful plan of action to make those commitments a reality? Will the human rights and civil society directorate develop a strategy addressing these issues?

Continued next page

(685 VIEWS)

This post was last modified on May 2, 2022 6:05 pm

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

View Comments

Recent Posts

Former US ambassador to Zimbabwe says Mnangagwa’s decision to lift tariffs on US products is a fatal blow to opposition

Former United States ambassador to Zimbabwe, Charles Ray, says the decision by Zimbabwe President Emmerson…

April 24, 2025

Is Zimbabwe heading in the wrong direction?

Dollarisation of revenue in Zimbabwe increased by 7 percentage points last year when it should…

April 23, 2025

US looking forward to reinforcing business and commercial ties with Zimbabwe

United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio today said the United States is looking forward…

April 18, 2025

Real test for ZiG begins

The real test for Zimbabwe’s currency, the Zimbabwe Gold(ZiG), has now begun after the government…

April 17, 2025

Octogenarian plotholders from Mutasa given 30 days to pay up or else

A group of plotholders at Irene Farm outside Mutare, but under Mutasa District, have been…

April 14, 2025

Think life in Zimbabwe is the worst on earth! Take a look

Life may be tough for most Zimbabweans but in terms of income, Zimbabwe is better…

April 9, 2025