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Solidarité internationale et luttes sociales en Afrique subsaharienne |
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| Dernière mise à jour : 16 August 2011 |
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Zimbabwe Voir également :
Afrique Australe :
COSATU calls on SADC leaders to act now in defence of democracy in Southern Africa
Multinationales - Pillage des ressources :
Civil Society Groups warn effectiveness of Kimberley Process compromised
Travail - Emploi - Syndicalisme :
Afrique : insécurité, troubles politiques et conflits armés à l’origine de violations des droits syndicaux
Travail - Emploi - Syndicalisme :
Africa: Insecurity, political unrest and armed conflict at the root of trade union rights violations
Afrique du Sud :
End Strain on Asylum System and Protect Zimbabweans
Afrique Australe :
Memorandum to SADC Summit on Zimbabwe and Swaziland
Afrique du Sud :
COSATU calls for international boycott of Zimbabwe arms ship
Afrique du Sud :
Memorandum from the South African Progressive Forces for international solidarity
Habitat :
Forced evictions reach crisis levels
Habitat :
Les expulsions forcées atteignent un niveau critique
Afrique du Sud :
Zimbabwean Migrants Vulnerable to Abuse
Habitat :
A Joint Appeal to African Ministers on urban housing
Droits Humains - Démocratie :
L’Union africaine doit se prononcer sur les graves violations des droits de l’Homme perpétrées sur le continent et exhorter les Etats à lutter contre leur impunité
Droits Humains - Démocratie :
The African Union must speak out regarding the grave violations of human rights perpetuated on the Continent and must exhort the States to fight against impunity for these violations
Afrique Australe :
Nothing natural about Southern Africa food crisisSite(s) web :
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) :
Kubatana - Zimbabwean Online Activist Community :
Zimbabwewatch.org :
Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (Zimcodd) :
Zimbabwe Social Forum :
Zimbabwe National Students Union (ZINASU) :
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition :
Women of Zimbabwe Arise ! :
RENAPAS :Document(s) :
Diamonds in the Rough - Human Rights Abuses in the Marange Diamond Fields of Zimbabwe - By Human Rights Watch - 26 juin 2009 (PDF - 591.5 ko)
“They Beat Me like a Dog” : Political Persecution of Opposition Activists and Supporters in Zimbabwe - By Human Rights Watch - 12 août 2008 (PDF - 286.6 ko)
The impact of "operation Murambatsuina / Restore Order” in Zimbabwe - A report by ActionAid International Southern African Partnership Programme - Zimbabwe - 27 août 2005 (PDF - 736.9 ko)
2004 Zimbabwe Social Forum report - - 1er décembre 2004 (PDF - 593.7 ko)
Onslaught against Human Rights dDefenders in Zimbabwe in 2002 - A report by Zimrights, in cooperation with
the observatory for the protection of Human Rights Defenders. A joint program of the FIDH and the OMCT - février 2003 - février 2003 (PDF - 390.2 ko)
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South African civil society statement on the Global Political Agreement
The coalition government of Zimbabwe must urgently institute reforms and ensure human rights respect We the undersigned South African Civil Society participants and the Zimbabwean Diaspora attending the above-mentioned event wish to highlight civil society’s grave concern at the lack of progress in the implementation of fundamental democracy and human rights reforms outlined in the Global Political Agreement guaranteed by SADC. We are concerned that the SADC mediation process has made little difference in the peace talks between the ZANU-PF and the two MDC formations in the quest to find a lasting solution to the Zimbabwean crisis. [Lire] 16 August 2011 Zimbabwe Civil Society Position Paper to SADC on the Elections Roadmap Zimbabwe civil society groups under the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition banner make the following five submissions to SADC leaders on critical steps to prepare Zimbabwe to hold genuinely free and fair elections under conditions of free political activity without violence or intimidation: [Lire] 15 August 2011 Failure to suspend Zimbabwe from blood diamond scheme undermines efforts to end abuses and clean up international trade The Kimberley Process (KP) rough diamond certification scheme failed to reach a consensus to suspend Zimbabwe at this week’s Plenary meeting in Namibia, in spite of evidence of serious non-compliance with the KP’s requirements and widespread government-sponsored human rights abuses, said civil society groups today. [Lire] 6 November 2009 Stakeholders Call for an Official Audit of Zimbabwe’s External Debt Stakeholders met yesterday in Harare to discuss Zimbabwe’s external debt, which threatens the welfare of its citizens who have been ravaged by a deep social, economic and political crisis. The Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (ZIMCODD), a coalition of institutions and individuals focusing on social and economic justice, convened the meeting under the theme “The Economy in Transition Dialogue Conference: Towards a Sustainable Public Debt for Zimbabwe”. [Lire] Zimcodd - 1 July 2009 Diamonds’ Deadly Toll They might end up as costly baubles on sale in shops around the world. But for some diamonds mined in Zimbabwe, the journey begins in massive illegal pit mines where men, women, and children are forced to work long days under the brutal authority of government troops, who took over the mine in a spree of bloodshed. [Lire] Human Rights Watch - 26 June 2009 More needed to end violations in Zimbabwe after 100 days Exactly 100 days have passed since the inauguration of the Inclusive Government in Zimbabwe. The inauguration brought hope of change, but human rights violations targeted at human rights and political activists persist. [Lire] Amnesty International - 22 June 2009 Update on the situation in Zimbabwe Since the signing of the Global Political Agreement (GPA) between Zanu PF and the two MDC formations, the Zimbabwean situation has not changed much. What has changed is the mood of people. There is an air of optimism all round. However, the situation on the grounds still points to a country still in crises. [Lire] Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions - ZCTU - 4 June 2009 100 jours après son entrée en fonction, le nouveau gouvernement zimbabwéen doit faire davantage pour mettre fin aux violations Il y a 100 jours exactement, au Zimbabwe, le gouvernement d’union prenait la direction du pays. Son entrée en fonction a suscité un espoir de changement, mais les atteintes aux droits humains ciblant les militants politiques et les défenseurs des droits humains perdurent. [Lire] Amnesty International - 22 mai 2009 ACTSA position on Zimbabwe ACTSA welcomes the agreement which has led to the inclusive government in Zimbabwe. We hope the agreement does work and brings about an end to human rights violations, restores democracy, tackles the economic crisis in a humane way and ensures an inclusive and effective response to the humanitarian crisis. It offers some hope to the Zimbabwean people that there is a solution to the political, economic and humanitarian crisis that has gripped their country and affected them for so long. [Lire] Action for Southern Africa (ACTSA) - 9 May 2009 COSATU condemns Mugabe for detention of opponents The Congress of South African Trade Unions strongly condemns the continued detention in Zimbabwe of MDC Treasurer and Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Roy Bennett, Zimbabwe Peace Project Director, Jestina Mukoko, and other MDC activists, on trumped-up charges. [Lire] COSATU - 18 February 2009
Mugabe and privatisations are part of Tsvangirai’s solution
- 29 June 2009 - According to Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai the removal of President Mugabe from office could push Zimbabwe into a “chaotic” situation. In an interview released on Saturday 27 June with Reuters, Tsvangirai argued that Mugabe “is part of the solution, whether you like him or not” and will ultimately decide himself when to step down. - Source : ACTSA
Southern African Social Forum Nearly Marred By Ban: Cosatu Not Allowed To Attend
- 18 octobre 2008 - By Faith ka-Manzi – “Destroy structures that give privileges to a few”, shouted Mr. Thomas Deve during the highly charged opening of the Southern African Social Forum (SASF) at the Bosco grounds in Manzini in the small Kingdom of Swaziland on October 16. He appealed to delegates of the forum - dubbed the ‘merchants of hope’ - not to be afraid to proclaim their struggles, and that “peoples forces will not be stopped by anyone”. Deve is a member of the Zimbabwe Social Forum. - Source : Centre for Civil Society
Desperately Seeking Sanity: The Persistence of the Old Regime in Zimbabwe
- 22 July 2008 - By Brian Raftopoulos - After yet another contested general and presidential election on 2008, the Zimbabwe crisis persists with ever deepening symptoms of political and economic decline. Not unlike other elections in Africa, and most recently in Kenya at the end of 2007, the 2008 Zimbabwean elections, because of the serious deficiencies in the electoral system and the debilitating effects of widespread state-sponsored violence, have both aggravated the social tensions and exacerbated the fragility of the country’s political fabric. For the purpose of the elections, as elsewhere on the continent, was not to democratize political spaces but to construct and contrive a renewed ‘electoral legitimacy’ through the combination of violence and skewed electoral processes, for a regime that has come to depend increasingly on coercion and limited patronage for its survival. - Source : Amandla
La gueule de bois du Zimbabwe
- 11 mars 2008 - Par Colette Braeckman - Au pouvoir sans interruption depuis 1980, Robert Gabriel Mugabe, 84 ans bien sonnés, va se représenter le 29 mars pour un nouveau mandat présidentiel de cinq ans à la tête du Zimbabwe. Porte parole du syndicat des enseignants, Takavafiro Shou, qui a déjà été arrêté et torturé, ne manque pas de vocabulaire pour qualifier le régime de son pays : « sultanisme », « clientélisme et patronage », « liberation hang over » (littéralement gueule de bois) frappant un ancien combattant de la libération qui ne veut pas savoir que les temps ont changé. - Source : Le carnet de Colette Braeckman
South Africa in Zimbabwe: The Vultures have descended
- 4 October 2007 - By Shawn Hattingh - Periodically over the last seven years, the South African government has claimed to be on the verge of brokering a deal between ZANU-PF and the MDC that would secure Zimbabwe’s political future. During these fleeting moments, the hopes of millions of Zimbabweans have been raised; only to be repeatedly smashed. This is because at every critical point over the last seven years, when change seemed imminent in Zimbabwe, South Africa has backed and protected ZANU-PF. - Source : Centre for Civil Society
Pan Africanism and the Zimbabwe crisis
- 12 September 2007 - By Rotimi Sankore - The Zimbabwean crisis is arguably the only ongoing crisis in which one side (the incumbent government) and its supporters have mobilised African support and silenced many by asserting more or less that its critics are sympathisers, supporters or agents of foreign interests and former colonial masters. - Source : Pambazuka News
Zimbabwe: Challenges for solidarity
- 18 May 2007 - By Ronald Wesso - The Zimbabwean situation raises the importance of international solidarity to extraordinary levels. - Source : Pambazuka News
Zimbabwe: An End to the Stalemate?
- 5 March 2007 - After years of political deadlock and continued economic and humanitarian decline, a realistic chance has at last begun to appear in the past few months to resolve the Zimbabwe crisis, by retirement of President Robert Mugabe, a power-sharing transitional government, a new constitution and elections. - Source : International Crisis Group
The social forum alternative in Zimbabwe, and Africa perhaps
- 8 septembre 2005 - by Tinashe Chimedza - In one of many critical works that Raftopoulos and Phimister have published on Zimbabwe they brilliantly observe that, “one of the major problems in Zimbabwe has been the rupturing of relations between redistributive questions and political democratisation”. - Source : Centre for Civil Society
Fin de règne à Harare
- septembre 2005 - Par Augusta Conchiglia - Des dizaines de milliers de Zimbabwéens se trouvent sans abri à la suite des démolitions administratives décidées en mai 2005. Populaire en raison de sa lutte contre la ségrégation raciale, le président Robert Mugabe s’enferme dans un autoritarisme destructeur, qu’illustre la brutale réforme agraire. - Source : Le Monde Diplomatique
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