EU Urges Zimbabwe To Reform

Jutta Urpilainen, former Finnish finance minister, gestures as she speaks during an interview in Helsinki, Finland, on Thursday, Jan. 25, 2018. European leaders agreed to use a wide-ranging asset quality review in 2014 to ensure their countrys banks entered ECB supervision in good health but Urpilainen, who helped establish the supervisor, said she doesnt know if that worked. Photographer: Roni Rekomaa/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The European Union (EU) has maintained a tough stance on Zimbabwe insisting that the southern African country must fully implement the 2018 election observer mission recommendations (EOM) before the 2023 polls.

This came after Zimbabwe’s Foreign Affairs minister, Frederick Shava on Monday met the EU Commissioner for International Partnerships Jutta Urpilainen for the first time in Brussels where the EU reiterated calls for electoral and economic reforms.

In a tweet yesterday, Jutta Urpilainen said: “First meeting with FM Zimbabwe @ShavaHon. A comprehensive discussion covering bilateral relations, COVID-19 response, future co-operation and complex regional situations. I reiterated the need to fully implement political and economic reforms, including EOM recommendations.”

Moreso, In a preliminary statement after the disputed 2018 polls, the EU observer mission noted electoral malpractices such as “bias in State media” in favour of Zanu PF, adding this meant “that a truly level playing field was not achieved.”

Urpilainen, a former Finland Deputy Prime Minister and Finance minister respectively, oversees the EU Commission’s work on international c-operation and sustainable development.

Meanwhile, human rights groups and the opposition have accused President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government of being reluctant to implement reforms despite promises to do so.

Some of the reforms include the need to implement recommendations by the Motlanthe Commission of Inquiry which investigated the post-election violence of August 1, 2018, including ensuring that those responsible for abuses are held accountable.

Last week, the Zimbabwe Election Support Network which has been tracking progress on the implementation of the EOM recommendations, expressed concern that “most remain unattended at a time when Zimbabwe is barely two years away from yet another set of harmonised elections in 2023.”

Opposition MDC Alliance’s secretary for international relations Gladys Hlatshwayo yesterday welcomed Urpilainen’s demands for electoral reforms

“The authoritarian consolidation in Zimbabwe is extremely worrying, shrinking democratic space, weaponising the law against opponents and human rights defenders, attempts to destroy the opposition, and undemocratic amendments of the Constitution,” Hlatshwayo said.

However, Zanu PF acting spokesperson Mike Bimha said electoral reforms does not happen overnight.

Bimha said the reform agenda was already in place, adding that critics were not aware of the procedures and processes that government had to follow in implementing the reforms.

 

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