BRUSSELS, Belgium
The European Union has removed Zimbabwe’s only weapons manufacturer from its sanctions list as Brussels continues to ease its 23-year-old embargo on the Southern African country.
Zimbabwe has been under EU
sanctions since 2002 for alleged human rights violations and electoral fraud.
Brussels on Wednesday said it
had lifted the asset freeze on the Zimbabwe Defence Industries, the last entity
that was still on its sanctions list.
But the bloc will maintain an embargo on arms and equipment that could be used for internal repression until February 2026, the Council of the European Union said in a statement.
“The EU continues to closely follow developments in Zimbabwe, with particular attention to the human rights situation and recalls its readiness to adapt the whole range of its policies accordingly,” the statement said.“The remaining restrictive measures in place do not affect the people of Zimbabwe, its economy, foreign direct investments or trade.”
The sanctions were imposed after
then Zimbabwean ruler Robert Mugabe expelled the EU election observer mission
ahead of the controversial 2002 presidential election.
Over the years, the EU has
been gradually easing the restrictions, leaving only the ZDI asset freeze until
the latest review.
The EU insists that it does
not have trade restrictions on Zimbabwe, but Brussels does not channel
development aid through the government.
Besides the EU, Zimbabwe has
also been under sanctions from the United States, Australia, Canada and New
Zealand.
The United Kingdom also
introduced its own set of sanctions after Brexit, which targets security chiefs
accused of abetting human rights violations.
Last year, the US ended its
two-decades-old sanction regime against Harare and re-imposed new measures
against President Emmerson Mnangagwa for alleged gross human rights violations
and corruption.
President Mnangagwa, in power
since the 2017 coup that toppled Mr Mugabe, became the first sitting head of
State to be designated by the US under its Global Magnitsky Programme, along
with his wife Auxilia.
His deputy, General (rtd)
Constantino Chiwenga, is also on the list, which has nine individuals and two
companies.
Washington changed its
sanctions to show that the curbs are not targeted at Zimbabwe following serious
lobbying by the African Union (AU) and Southern African Development Community
(SADC) leaders.
Other people targeted in the
new measures are Defence minister Oppah Muchinguri, a top intelligence official
Walter Tapfumaneyi, former State Security minister Owen Ncube and businessman
Kudakwashe Tagwirei as well as his wife Sandra.
Mr Tagwirei, a wealthy
businessman who has won several multimillion-dollar government contracts, is a
presidential adviser and a financier of the ruling Zanu PF party.
The US first imposed sanctions
on Zimbabwe in 2003 after accusing the regime of the late Mugabe of electoral
fraud and human rights violations. Individuals linked to the government were
banned from travelling to America and their assets were at risk of being
seized.
Zimbabwe was also blocked from
accessing funding from multilateral bodies that had US nationals on their
boards.
In recent years, African
countries led by South Africa, have been lobbying for the removal of the
sanctions which, they say, are also hurting Zimbabwe’s neighbours, as its
nationals are flocking to other countries to escape economic hardship.
The West says the sanctions
can only be lifted completely if President Mnangagwa’s government institutes
political and economic reforms.
Zimbabwe insists that it is
being punished for embarking on a land reform programme that saw productive
farms being transferred from the minority white population to the majority
blacks.
SADC countries argue that the sanctions have taken a toll on Zimbabwe’s economy and this has forced millions of people to migrate to neighbouring countries, which puts a strain on their own service delivery.
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