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EU court dismisses Zimbabwe sanctions appeal

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The Zimbabwean government has lost its appeal at a top European Union court to have sanctions imposed on more than a 100 individuals linked to the Zanu PF government removed.

The Zimbabwean government has lost its appeal at a top European Union court to have sanctions imposed on more than a 100 individuals linked to the Zanu PF government removed.

Staff writer / Wires

Zimbabwe Prosecutor Johannes Tomana, as well as 109 other people including top police and army officers, plus 11 companies, had appealed to the General Court of the European Union to annul the sanctions order.

The EU began easing visa ban and asset freeze sanctions against Zimbabwe’s ruling elite early last year in the hope of encouraging reforms but left top officials including President Robert Mugabe on the blacklist.

The General Court, second only to the European Court of Justice, said however that they were correctly identified as close to Mugabe’s government and its “serious infringement of human rights.”

Democracy and human rights

Tomana had been put on the sanctions list because he had “engaged in activities that seriously undermine democracy, respect for human rights and the rule of law,” the Court said in a statement.

The inclusion of the other individuals and companies were broadly comparable, it said. The court said there was an adequate legal basis for the sanctions since the positions they held “are such that it is legitimate to characterise them as leaders of Zimbabwe or as associates of those leaders and thereby to justify, on that ground alone, their being listed.”

The EU first imposed sanctions against Zimbabwe in 2002 over its rights record but decided to ease them in the hope this would encourage Mugabe, now 91, to introduce some measure of reform.

Mugabe earlier this year took up the one-year rotating chairmanship of the African Union saying that he cared little for what the West might say.

“If they want to continue it’s up to them but these sanctions are wrong,” he said at the time, adding: “If Europe comes in the spirit to co-operate and not the spirit to control us and control our ways, they will be very welcome.”