How Zambia Protests Was Stopped With Unlawful Force - AmnestyHow Zambia Protests Was Stopped With Unlawful Force

Rights group Amnesty International has expressed grave concern over Zambia’s worsening human rights records ahead of the 12 August election.

Amnestey international’s director for East and South Africa, Deprose Muchena, speaking to newsmen yesterday pointed out that the past five years have seen ‘an increasingly brutal crackdown on human rights, characterised by brazen attacks on any form of dissent’.

According to the rights group, protests were being stopped with what it described as ‘unlawful and lethal force‘ amid intimidation against those who spoke about corruption allegations facing the regime.

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Amnesty says the last five years – under President Edgar Lungu – have been marked by media censorship, use of “excessive force” by the police, arrests, and detention, which have created fear.

Amnesty also narrated that a 15-year-old boy was arrested and charged in March last year after he allegedly criticised President Lungu on Facebook.

It also mentions the killing of two people during a gathering of opposition supporters in December as well as a student killed two years earlier during a violent dispersal of a student protest.

‘Such impunity is now entrenched in Zambia,‘ Amnesty says, while calling for the authorities to respect human rights ahead and after the August elections.

 

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK