Zimbabwe Police Commissioner resigns
honoury Interpol title– May 30, 2003
LYON,
France -- Augustine Chihuri, Commissioner of the Zimbabwe Republic
Police, has given up his title as an honorary Vice President of
Interpol’s Executive Committee. Mr Chihuri was one of seven
former members of the committee named as honorary members after
their terms expired in October 2002.
Mr Chihuri informed the Interpol President, Jesus Espigares Mira,
and Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble in a letter dated
May 28, 2003, that he would step aside because of the continuing
controversy over the honorary title and to avoid politicising Interpol.
Mr Espigares Mira said that in light of how the matter had become
politicised after a Zimbabwean police spokesman’s inaccurate
comments to the media, he understood why Mr Chihuri chose to resign.
“Mr Chihuri has done the correct thing,” Mr Espigares
Mira said. “The appointment was not meant to endorse the actions
of the Zimbabwe Republic Police or Mr Chihuri’s work as Commissioner.”
Secretary General Noble said he very much regretted that in a comment
to news media on May 6 a Zimbabwe Republic Police spokesman had
suggested Mr Chihuri’s honorary title was an endorsement of
the actions of the police in that country.
“That statement was inaccurate,” Mr Noble said. “Mr
Chihuri’s honorary title was one of several given by the Interpol
Executive Committee to outgoing members and has been a customary
way for Interpol to recognise their work on that committee. “The
fact that a ZRP spokesman attempted to use Interpol to fight off
political criticism has caused Interpol to be unfairly and unnecessarily
attacked.”
The General Assembly, Interpol’s supreme governing ody, decided
in 1994 that such honorary titles should be conferred on outgoing
Executive Committee members for a period of three years.
As an honorary Vice President of the Executive Committee, Mr Chihuri
received no special benefits, rights or privileges. He, like all
individuals named to such honorary posts, was not permitted or expected
to discharge any duties on behalf of Interpol.
Mr Chihuri was first elected to Interpol’s Executive Committee
by delegates to the organization’s General Assembly in 1996.
In 1999, he was elected by delegates to the General Assembly to
serve another three-year term, this time as the Executive Committee’s
Vice President for Africa.
Interpol is a democratic and apolitical institution, which allows
delegates from its 181 member countries to elect whomever they wish
to the Executive Committee.
Interpol was founded in 1923 to enhance police cooperation and
is now the largest international police organization in the world.
Article 3 of the Interpol constitution forbids it from becoming
involved in any activities of a political nature.
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