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HARARE – A three-member
team of International Labour Organisation (ILO) lawyers arrived in Zimbabwe on
Wednesday to begin investigations into the alleged torture of Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Union (ZCTU) leaders in 2006, the labour union has said. “The three distinguished
lawyers appointed by the ILO on the basis of impartiality and knowledge of
industrial relations and human rights are now in the country to investigate
whether the there was any human rights violations when people where beaten for
expressing themselves in 2006,” ZCTU president Lovemore Matombo told ZimOnline. The lawyers, who are from
South Africa and Mauritius, will mainly conduct interviews with ZCTU leaders,
labour and workers rights activists assaulted by the police after they staged
protests against deteriorating working and living conditions for workers. The ILO lawyers are also
expected to meet with the police, several government ministers, security
agencies and labour leaders. "They are going to
meet several people but I can not go into the details of their work because it
will be pre-judicial to do so," said Matombo. Several ZCTU leaders and
activists incurred serious injuries including broken limbs while others are
said have suffered some permanent disabilities. Police however denied
assaulting or torturing the ZCTU officials, insisting that the unionists were
injured after they tried to jump off a moving police truck. But lawyers representing
the union leaders alleged at the time that their clients were tortured while in
police detention at the notorious Matapi Police Station in Mbare. Torture and other forms of
inhuman punishment are illegal in Zimbabwe. Western governments and
local human rights groups condemned the torture of the ZCTU activists but
President Robert Mugabe publicly backed the police for ill-treating the
unionists who he accused of plotting to topple his government. An ILO delegation visited
the country early this year to access the situation of workers’ rights in
Zimbabwe and urged the country to adhere to the international statutes on
workers’ rights. A report on Zimbabwe is to be presented at an ILO
meeting in Geneva, Switzerland later this year. The report will encompass the
findings of the three-man ILO investigating team.
— ZimOnline
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