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By David GollustSecretary of State Condoleezza Rice marked International Human Rights Day Monday by honoring a Zimbabwe lawyers group that has defended democracy activists1 in that country. Rice also met with leaders of human rights groups who faulted the Bush administration's own record on the issue. VOA's David Gollust reports from the State Department.
Secretary Rice has given the State Department's first annual Freedom Defenders2 Award to the non-governmental group Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, which has provided legal assistance to besieged3 democracy activists there.
At a State Department ceremony, Rice presented the award to the organization's president, Arnold Tsunga, for what she said was its tireless and fearless work to advance democratic principles, despite ongoing4 repression5 by the government of President Robert Mugabe.
"In Zimbabwe, civil society remains6 under siege amid political and economic crises caused by the irresponsible policies of the regime," said Condoleezza Rice. "Over the past several months, the authorities have engaged in an intensified7 campaign of repression, characterized by harassment8 and intimidation9, arrests and violent assaults against peaceful opposition10 activists, professionals, independent labor11 leaders, and other members of civil society."
State Department officials say the Zimbabwe lawyers group, founded 10 years ago, has been a target of vilification12 from the Mugabe government and that Tsunga himself has endured numerous arrests, police raids on his home and threats for his activities.
The Freedom Defenders Award was one of two created last year by the Secretary of State to promote the annual Human Rights Day observance.
Rice gave the parallel Diplomacy13 for Freedom Award to U.S. ambassador to Belarus Karen Stewart, for what were termed her innovative14 efforts to support defenders of freedom in that authoritarian15 central European state.
Rice also met privately16 Monday with leaders of several U.S.-based human rights groups, among them Amnesty International USA executive director Larry Cox.
In a written statement, Cox said the seriousness of the United States' commitment to human rights is called into question by its own practices in the war against terrorism, including the continued detention17 of some 300 terror suspects without charge or trial at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Cox said the group also pressed Rice to do more to help restore full democracy in Pakistan and to end violence against civilians18 in Sudan's Darfur region.
In luncheon19 comments to a women's foreign policy group Monday, Rice said the Bush administration would "like nothing better" than to close the Guantanamo facility, but must have assurances that what she termed the "very dangerous" detainees there would not return to anti-U.S. violence if handed back to their countries of origin.
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