iBusiness

Volume 13, Issue 1 (March 2021)

ISSN Print: 2150-4075   ISSN Online: 2150-4083

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.61  Citations  

The Weaponisation of the Coronavirus Crisis in Zimbabwe: Legal and Extra-Legal Instruments

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 410KB)  PP. 48-66  
DOI: 10.4236/ib.2021.131004    521 Downloads   2,017 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

This article sets out to examine the legal and extra-legal instruments deployed by the ruling executive-military alliance in the fight against the scourge of the COVID-19 pandemic in Zimbabwe. The ruling executive-military alliance led by President Emmerson Mnangagwa has responded to the eruption of the coronavirus by adopting a highly securitised approach backed by a battery of legal and extra-legal instruments. It is therefore the argument of this article that the Mnangagwa administration has weaponised COVID-19 in order to achieve some objectives beyond the public health concerns. In particular, the government has sort to use the lockdown measures to clamp down on political opposition, silence critics, contain the restive population, and entrench its power and control over some key accountability institutions including the legislature, the judiciary, and the media. The article concludes by canvassing for the de-securitisation and de-weaponisation of COVID-19. This means shifting the concept of securitisation of public health threat from a state-centred focus that privileges government and state security apparatuses to one that accentuates people as the main beneficiaries of the fight against this deadly coronavirus pandemic.

Share and Cite:

Moyo, G. and Phulu, K. (2021) The Weaponisation of the Coronavirus Crisis in Zimbabwe: Legal and Extra-Legal Instruments. iBusiness, 13, 48-66. doi: 10.4236/ib.2021.131004.

Cited by

[1] Electoral democracy and human rights during the COVID-19 pandemic in Zimbabwe
African Identities, 2023
[2] Trends and Dynamics of COVID-19 in Zimbabwe: Implications for Selected Sustainable Development Goals
COVID-19 in Zimbabwe …, 2023
[3] Guns, Truncheons and the Virus: An Analysis of Liberation War Ideology in the Covid-19 Pandemic Response in Zimbabwe
African Studies, 2022
[4] The Influence of Frames of Reference in Understanding Covid-19 in Zimbabwe
International Journal of African …, 2022
[5] Unpacking Civil-Military Relations Trajectory in the New Dispensation in Zimbabwe
International Journal of Law and Public …, 2022
[6] A critical assessment of Church and political engagement in Zimbabwe under the new dispensation
Verbum et Ecclesia, 2022
[7] Policing COVID-19 restrictive regulations in Zimbabwe: the shifting crime trends and the human rights implications
African Security Review, 2022
[8] Politicising'COVID-19': an analysis of selected ZANU-PF officials' 2020-2021 media statements on the pandemic in Zimbabwe
Acta Academica, 2021
[9] Civil 'disobedience'and images of war: The military and police in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic in Zimbabwe
The Dyke, 2021

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.