Zimbabwe officials blacklisted over human rights abuse

Police escorted hundreds of people marching on the streets of Harare in protest over US sanctions. File picture: AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi

Police escorted hundreds of people marching on the streets of Harare in protest over US sanctions. File picture: AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi

Published Mar 11, 2020

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Washington - The United States on Wednesday imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe's state security minister and its ambassador to Tanzania, the U.S. Treasury Department said, accusing them of human rights abuses, including directing an attack on peaceful protestors.

Owen Ncube, Zimbabwe's state security minister, was blacklisted over accusations that he ordered security services to abduct and mistreat members of the opposition group, the Treasury Department said in a statement.

The Treasury Department also said it imposed sanctions on Anselem Sanyatwe, Zimbabwe's ambassador to Tanzania, accusing him of directing security forces to attack protestors during demonstrations after the 2018 elections, when he was commander of the National Army's Presidential Guard Brigade.

Six protesters and bystanders died and dozens were injured in 2018 in violence after delays in announcing results that made Emmerson Mnangagwa the first elected head of state since Robert Mugabe's removal from power.

"Political and military leaders in Zimbabwe have repeatedly used violence to silence political dissent and peaceful protests," Deputy Treasury Secretary Justin Muzinich said.

The sanctions freeze any US-held assets of the two officials and generally prohibit Americans from doing business with them.

Ncube and Sanyatwe were previously barred in 2019 by the State Department from entering the United States.

Reuters

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