Human Rights Watch has released a report saying the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic set off human rights crises worldwide.
The report documents how governments have allowed corruption to flourish and used the pandemic to clamp down on critics and the opposition.
The Human Rights Watch report says the coronavirus pandemic which has claimed more than 2.5 million lives worldwide should not be used as an excuse to trample on people’s basic rights.
Dewa Mavhinga, head of Human Rights Watch in southern Africa, said civic groups and the media must ensure governments account during the coronavirus pandemic.
Mavhinga sums up the HRW report: “Some government introduced some restrictions on movements including national lockdowns which were quite disproportionate or inappropriate for the level of public health threat that was being confronted. We saw in our report that some government instituted discriminatory policies and authorities enforced in a discriminatory way with excessive and sometimes fatal forces in terms of the enforcement of those regulations, including the killing of people in South Africa.”
The report says Zimbabwe’s government did not release political prisoners when President Emmerson Mnangagwa granted amnesty to decongest crowded jails to contain the spread of COVID-19.
“We also saw the excessive use of force by the military and police and the arrest of thousands of people into places of detention that are overcrowded already which further raise the risk of the further spread of the pandemic,” said Mavhinga.
“We also saw that the virtually collapsed health system was not fully equipped to address the COVID-19 pandemic challenges, especially in the context of serious reports of corruption in the procurement of COVID19 equipment. Journalists and anti-corruption activists who exposed the corruption faced harassment and arrests by the authorities in Zimbabwe.”
Monica Mutsvangwa, Zimbabwe’s information…
Read the full article at www.premiumtimesng.com
Connect with us on our socials: