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UN condemns Zim crackdown

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NEW YORK — Citing arbitrary arrests, intimidation and harassment, the United Nations human rights arm on Saturday condemned recent attacks against human rights defenders in Zimbabwe ahead of elections expected later this year.

NEW YORK  — Citing arbitrary arrests, intimidation and harassment, the United Nations human rights arm on Saturday condemned recent attacks against human rights defenders in Zimbabwe ahead of elections expected later this year.

Report by UN News

“We are concerned about the crackdown on non-governmental organisations and dissenting voices seen as critical of President Robert Mugabe’s rule and apparently politically motivated prosecutions,” Rupert Colville, spokesperson for the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, said at a briefing in Geneva.

In the latest case, on January 14, the police pressed charges against Okay Machisa, the director of Zimbabwe Human Rights Association (ZimRights) and chairperson of the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition.

He was accused of publishing false statements prejudicial to the State, fraud and forgery after allegedly conducting illegal voter registration.

Machisa handed himself to the police on  January 14, accompanied by his lawyer and remains in detention.

In a previous incident, ZimRights education programmes manager Leo Chamahwinya and ZimRights local chapter chairperson Dorcas Shereni were arrested by the police on December 13 last year. They were both denied bail by the High Court and remain in detention, Colville added.

Visiting Zimbabwe for the first time last year, High Commissioner Navi Pillay urged Mugabe to ensure that the upcoming elections will be free and fair and held in a peaceful atmosphere.

During the visit, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai told her that there were still challenges in the country, despite the formation of the government of national unity in 2009. The coalition was formed as part of an effort to stop the violence that accompanied elections in the previous year when Tsvangirai ran against Mugabe in the presidential polls.