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UK MPs want Mnangagwa barred from King Charles III coronation

Friday April 28 2023
Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa

Zimbabwe's President Emmerson Mnangagwa. British parliamentarians are pushing the country’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's government to withdraw an invitation to Mnangagwa to attend the coronation of King Charles III. PHOTO | YASUYOSHI CHIBA | AFP

By KITSEPILE NYATHI

British parliamentarians are pushing the country’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's government to withdraw an invitation to Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa to attend the coronation of King Charles III, citing alleged human rights violations in the Southern African country.

President Mnangagwa last week said he was "excited" to receive an invite to attend the royal event on May 6.

He will be the first Zimbabwean leader to visit London in over two decades after the United Kingdom imposed sanctions on Harare over alleged human rights violations and electoral fraud during the rule of the late Robert Mugabe.

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But a letter written to British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly that was signed by the chairperson of the All-Party Parliamentary Group Zimbabwe (APPG) in the House of Commons, Navendu Mishra, urged the UK government to advise Buckingham Palace to reconsider the invitation of the Zimbabwean leader.  

“To summarise, political violence and human rights abuses are widespread with opposition members of parliament and party members [being] harassed, beaten, imprisoned and murdered,” the APPG said.

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‘Corruption is rife’

“Corruption is rife, extending to the highest levels of government, destroying the economy and impoverishing the Zimbabwe people and the judiciary as well as the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) and all institutions of the state have been suborned to the ruling party,” it added.

"The main opposition party leader Nelson Chamisa is habitually denied permission to hold rallies and his political activities are frequently disrupted by violent Zanu-PF supporters and the police,” the legislators added.

Nelson Chamisa of the opposition Citizens Coalition for Change.

Nelson Chamisa of Zimbabwe's opposition party Citizens Coalition for Change. PHOTO | JEKESAI NJIKIZANA | AFP

Read: Zimbabwe opposition braces for 'rough' election

“The ZEC appointees are overwhelmingly Zanu-PF supporters, including the sons and daughters of key Zanu-PF officials,” they added.

They also raised the issue of opposition legislator Job Sikhala, who was arrested nearly a year ago for speaking on behalf of the family of a slain opposition activist.

“It is more than 300 days since Zimbabwe’s Citizens Coalition for Change Deputy Chairperson Job Sikhala was detained after providing legal representation to the family of murdered opposition campaigner Moreblessing Ali,” the APPG said.

“Since then, he has been held without trial at Chikurubi Maximum Security Prison and denied his constitutional right to bail,” they added.

Wrong signal

The legislators said inviting Mnangagwa, who took over from Mugabe in 2017 following a military coup, will send the wrong signal that the UK condones bad governance.

“The coronation invitation will inevitably be used by Mnangagwa as tacit acceptance by the UK of publicly evidenced political violence and repression in the run up to the forthcoming election and will be deeply demoralising to ordinary Zimbabweans in their struggle for democracy,” the MPs said.

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“We, therefore, urge the government to withdraw President Mnangagwa’s invitation until Sikhala and other political prisoners are granted their constitutional right to bail and concrete actions are taken to address human rights abuses and guarantee free and fair elections,” the MPs said.

The UK was still part of the EU when Brussels first imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe in 2002 following a disputed presidential election.

After Brexit, London imposed a set of targeted sanctions against Zimbabwean security chiefs for their alleged involvement in human rights violations.

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