DECEMBER, 2023 Minority Rights in Zimbabwe According to Francesco Capotorti, Special Rapporteur of the United Nations (UN) Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, a minority is defined as a group that is numerically smaller than the majority of a state's population, occupying a non-dominant position. The United Nations Minorities Declaration (Article 1) provides that states should protect the existence of minorities. Persons with disabilities (PWDs) are among the most marginalised minority groups in Zimbabwe and the world. It is typical for their needs and concerns to be disregarded, repressed, and covered up. Throughout the country, ZPP recorded violations of the right to equality and non-discrimination; and partisan distribution of food aid and farming inputs. Evidently, there is a lack of priority for people with disabilities in the distributions thus raising concerns of their wellbeing and access to adequate food, and the state should act promptly to assist this group of people given the worsening economic conditions. In an ongoing case concerning a victim with disability, a ZANU PF activist Lawson Zulu is accused of extortion after he allegedly demanded a US$200 protection fee from a beneficiary of a residential stand scheme facilitated for the Zimstarnews.com, an online publication has reported that several beneficiaries under the scheme for the visually impaired have been threatened by ZANU PF activists trying to compel the victim to drop the charges. Section 83 of Zimbabwe’s Constitution provides that the state should address barriers that hinder PWDs from being self-reliant” and not being able “to be protected from exploitation and abuse��� as well as “to have access to medical treatment.” Some of the minority groups disregarded in Zimbabwe include the LGBTIQ community. In a statement about human rights violations against its community members recently, GALZ, an association of LGBTIQ people in Zimbabwe, remarked that one in every three LBTQ women are survivors of gender-based violence. They added that LBTQ women are victims of violence in digital spaces facing online harassment, cyberbullying and targeted hate speech on social media. The statement further states that the violations against LGBTIQ also include derogatory comments, which also affect their human dignity. Discrimination, violence and derogatory statements against LGBTIQ people violates their right to equality and nondiscrimination as stipulated in Section 56 (1and 3) of the Zimbabwean Constitution, protecting all citizens and recognising them as equal before the law. visually impaired in Nyatsime, Chitungwiza. Partisan distribution of food aid and farming inputs ZPP recorded 19 cases of partisan distributions of food aid and farming inputs. All cases were related to ZANU PF officials denying opposition members access to either government-sponsored food aid or farming inputs, largely under the government-sponsored Pfumvudza input scheme. In most of the cases, victims were accused of being members of the opposition, largely the Citizens Coalition for Change. In a case recorded on 10 December in Matabeleland South in Manama Village, ZANU PF activist Mokeetsi Noko removed a beneficiary on the list citing that he is a Mthwakazi Republic Party activist. The victim was told to receive his farming inputs from his party and not ZANU PF. In Midlands, a case in Zhombe constituency was recorded where Violet Shumba a ZANU PF activist deprived maize sees to two victims because they had failed to attend ZANU PF meetings for nearly four months. By unlawfully using government sponsored food aid, Shumba was effectively violating the villagers’ rights to ‘make political choices freely (Section 67 of the Zimbabwean Constitution) as well as to freely and peacefully ‘participate in the activities of a political party or organisation of their choice.’ The partisan distribution of food aid and farming inputs also disadvantages poor households who largely depend on these inputs as the continued fashion limits the victims’ right to access adequate food.

Select target paragraph3