The United
States has placed a former Zimbabwe army general on the sanctions list
over the killing of six civilians during protests that followed last
year’s disputed presidential elections.
Former head of
the presidential guard Anselem Sanyatwe commanded the troops that opened
fire on people protesting against the delayed release of president
election results in Harare on August 1, 2018.
He
became the first person to be sanctioned over the crackdown and the
first Zimbabwean official to be put on the US sanction list since the
military ousted long time rule Robert Mugabe in 2017.
Retired
Brigadier General Sanyatwe, who is now Zimbabwe’s ambassador to
Tanzania, blamed the opposition for the killings when he appeared before
a commission of inquiry led by former South African president Kgalema
Motlanthe.
The commission found that those soldiers’
use of love ammunition to quell the protests was “clearly unjustified
and disproportionate.”
On the anniversary of the
killings, US ambassador to Zimbabwe Brian Nichols said the heavy handed
response by the army had dented the Southern African country’s efforts
to end its international isolation.
“The killing of six civilians and wounding of 35 more by
security forces on that day remains a huge setback for Zimbabwe in the
eyes of the international community,” he said.
“The
security forces further exacerbated this setback by systematically
targeting opposition and civil society members in their homes, first in
Harare’s high-density suburbs, and later throughout the country, for
much of August 2018.”
The envoy said Washington was worried that none of the soldiers involved in the killings had been prosecuted.
He
said recent threats by government officials that soldiers will be
deployed to quell any protests by the opposition were alarming.
In
January this year, President Emmerson Mnangagwa deployed soldiers after
protests against a steep increase in the price of fuel turned violent.
Human rights groups say soldiers shot dead at least 17 people and raped dozens of women during the clampdown.
“I
have yet to learn of a single soldier or security forces member held to
account for the deaths of civilians as the report clearly mandated,”
Amb Nichols said.
“Sadly, the ink was barely dry on the
report before security forces again acted with impunity killing more
civilians in January 2019.”
Zimbabwe’s Foreign Affairs
minister Sibusiso Moyo on Thursday said police were being retrained to
handle demonstrations to avoid the deployment of soldiers to keep law
and order.
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