The US has sanctioned Zimbabwe’s state security minister over alleged human rights abuses, just hours after Zimbabwe’s government defiantly marked its first Anti-Sanctions public holiday.
State Security Minister Owen Ncube, a close ally of Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa, is banned from entering the US.
The US and others have expressed shock and concern over sometimes deadly crackdowns against activists and others in the southern African nation as the economy collapses and frustration grows. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a separate statement on Twitter said that state-sanctioned violence in Zimbabwe “must end now.”
Today, I publicly designated Owen Ncube for his involvement in a gross violation of #HumanRights in #Zimbabwe. State-sanctioned violence in Zimbabwe must end now and those responsible for human rights violations must be held accountable.
— Secretary Pompeo (@SecPompeo) October 25, 2019
Zimbabwe’s government asserts that sanctions are to blame for its crisis, and it rallied hundreds of people in the capital Friday to mark the new anti-sanctions holiday. The US says sanctions are against entities and individuals, including Mnangagwa, and not against the country as a whole.
-
US to Turkey: Don’t turn on Russian system, avoid sanctions
The United States will spare Turkey from sanctions over its purchase of the S-400 missile system from Russia if it does not turn it on, a US official ... Middle East -
President Trump lifts US sanctions on Turkey
US President Donald Trump announced that recent US sanctions on Turkey will be lifted in an address from the White House on Wednesday. “I ... Middle East -
‘Horror and shame’: US senators, Kurdish leader call for Turkey sanctions
US lawmakers kept up their push on Monday to impose sanctions on Turkey if it does not end its offensive in northeastern Syria, and a leading Kurdish ... World News