|
13/12/2002
NGO exposes a catalogue of human right abuses in Africa
To
mark Human Rights Day the organisation CREDO, which is an International
human rights organisation based in Senegal and London, has written
an extraordinary open letter to the recently formed African Union,
whose President is South Africa's Thabo Mbeki, cataloguing the human
rights abuses sustained in 26 out of the Union's 53 member states.
It alleges that despite subscribing to a seemingly democratic charter
many African states still do not understand that good governance
is essential to development. The letter written by Rotimi Sankore,
CREDO Coordinator, is reproduced below.'
To:
H.E. Amara Essy
Chairman ad Interim
Commission of the African Union
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Open
Letter: Africa's Human Rights Record and the African Union
On
the occasion of the commemoration of the first international Human
Rights Day (December 10) following the establishment of the African
Union, we are writing to you to express our deep concern over the
lack of improvement in the human rights situation in Africa. In
the five months since the AU's existence, rights violations have
actually increased in many member countries of the Union while the
Union maintains a rather deafening silence.
In
Eritrea, for instance, there has been a clamp down on freedom of
expression, the rights of Eritrea's people to freely choose their
own government and of the media, which has resulted in a ban on
the entire independent media. In Liberia and Cameroon, human rights
defenders and journalists have either been charged with treason
or imprisoned. In Nigeria, a fatwa has been issued against a journalist,
Isioma Daniel, calling for her arbitrary and extrajudicial murder.
And in the past one week, Nigeria's government has prevented several
human rights advocates and defenders from travelling out of the
country on the unsubstantiated grounds that they are "security
risks".
In
Egypt, human rights advocates are prosecuted or threatened with
prosecution for exercising their right to freedom of expression
or making lawful democratic demands. In Côte d'Ivoire, the
government presides over the persecution of both its own nationals
and nationals of neighbouring African countries.
In
Zimbabwe, and Uganda, among other countries, legislation has been
introduced which restrict or threaten punitive measures against
the media. In these and many countries, individual journalists are
still persecuted for reports, which are not denied or proven to
be untrue. These attacks on the media and individual journalists
by many African governments reflect a trend, which shows in real
terms that they are yet to accept that democracy and good governance
are indispensable to stability and development.
Also,
women and in particular young girls continue to suffer violence
and from the consequences of conflict and poverty. Although violence
against women is a universal problem, there seems to be no hurry
to adopt and implement the Draft Protocol To The African Charter
On The Rights Of Women In Africa.
Around
the African continent, Africans are prevented from travelling freely
by immigration rules that privilege non-African nationals. For instance,
many Africans travelling to other African countries outside their
sub-regions have to wait up to between four and six weeks for visas,
which many non African's can acquire within a week or on arrival
at entry points. Collective expulsions of Africans within the continent
are also routine practice and refugees and illegal immigrants within
the continent continue to be subjected to unspeakable dehumanisation.
In
all, twenty-six of the fifty-three member countries of the African
Union have engaged in notable rights violations since the formation
of the Union in July 2002. To the best of our knowledge, the African
Union has not responded robustly to any of these rights abuses.
Most rights abuses involve violations of the rights to opinion,
expression, association, assembly, free movement and press freedom.
This
state of affairs, directly contradict the AU's stated objectives
to "promote democratic principles and institutions, popular
participation and good governance" and to "promote and
protect human peoples' rights in accordance with the African Charter
on Human and Peoples' Rights and other relevant human rights instruments"
To
cap all these, about thirty million people in Africa are now in
danger of severe malnutrition and starvation. The situation is particularly
bad in Ethiopia and southern Africa. While lack of rain fall and
other circumstances are not man made, the lack of adequate short
and long term remedies or preventive measures are direct reflections
of repressive legal and institutional frameworks, which compel millions
to painfully await circumstances, which could have been avoided
or ameliorated by openness, and more democratic participation in
government.
The
above examples and countless other unreported violations which have
gone unchallenged by the African Union are without doubt, manifestations
of an absence of political will, and an inability to effectively
implement existing mechanisms for the supervision of the provisions
of Africa's human rights instruments. On this occasion of the Human
Rights Day, we therefore call on you to without delay utilise your
good office to:
*Publicly
and unreservedly censure those African governments that violate
the human rights of their nationals, foreign residents or inhabitants
or deprive victims of such violations of effective remedies;
·
Remind African governments of the primacy of the rights to life,
freedom of expression, participation in government and associated
rights, and guaranteeing human rights generally. The AU should announce
measures to guarantee that the rights of people to freely choose
their governments in free, fair and open elections shall be taken
seriously, respected and not be tampered with by the Union or any
its member governments.
·
*Take immediate and active steps to guarantee better funding of
the institutions of the African regional human rights system, including
in particular the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights
and the African Committee on the Rights and Welfare of the Child;
*Take
immediate and active steps to ensure that AU member countries ratify
the Protocol for the Establishment of the African Court on Human
and Peoples' Rights without further delay.
*Remind
all AU member governments of their obligations to observe, promote,
protect, and fulfil human and peoples' rights in Africa, including
the economic, social and cultural rights of all persons in Africa;
*Take
immediate measures to ensure appropriate priority is accorded to
the effective protection of refugees and other victims of forced
displacement in Africa.
We
would be pleased if you could address these concerns, and take this
occasion to clarify how the AU intends to realise the quite ambitious
obligations that are contained in the Constitutive Act concerning
the protection of human rights.
The
Constitutive Act represents an orientation towards the protection
of human rights different from the OAU Charter that it replaced.
Articles 4 and 30 of the Constitutive Act require the countries
of the Union to be proactive in the protection of human rights generally,
and, most especially, in situations of war crimes, crimes against
humanity, genocide and unconstitutional changes in government among
others. These new and far reaching obligations require African governments
and the African Union itself to take the protection of human rights
seriously because this is the only way that a degeneration into
genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, fratricidal conflict,
civil unrest and unconstitutional changes in government can be avoided.
In
the OAU Refugee Convention and the African Charter on Human and
Peoples' Rights, the member States of the Union have a body of norms
and obligations, adherence to which would greatly contribute to
positively transforming Africa's human rights record. More than
one year after the entry into force of the Constitutive Act in May
2001, we are yet to see evidence of a readiness on the part of the
Union to provide the leadership that is required by the Constitutive
Act in ensuring compliance with Africa's and international human
rights standards. The optimism inspired by the adoption of radical
new provisions of the Constitutive Act is now at risk of having
been in vain.
We
look forward to your response to these issues and to the opportunity
of working with you and the AU for the effective protection of human
and peoples' rights on the African continent.
Yours
Sincerely
Rotimi
Sankore
Coordinator
Centre for Research Education and Development of
- [CREDO] - Freedom of Expression and Associated Rights
CC:
His Excellency,
President Thabo Mbeki,
Current Chairman of The African Union
©EuropaWorld 2002
- Copyright Policy / About
us / Endorsements / Contact
us |