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'Zimbabwe
needs outside help'
Thomas Hartleb, Mail & Guardian
(SA)
November 07, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/&articleid=324282&referrer=RSS
Police torture
and brutality are rife and High Court orders are openly disregarded
in Zimbabwe, pointing to a "grave constitutional crisis",
according to a report released on Wednesday.
The most worrying
aspect is open attacks on members of the legal profession, said
advocate Andrea Gabriel, who was part of a recent four-member delegation
that investigated policing in Zimbabwe.
"We were
shocked at the levels of evidence of torture and police brutality
and the impunity shown to members of the legal profession,"
she said.
The report,
by the International Bar Association Human Rights Institute, is
entitled Partisan
Policing: An Obstacle to Human Rights and Democracy in Zimbabwe.
"Perhaps
the loudest alarm bell is the very clear and open contemptuous disregard
of orders of the High Court," she said.
Gabriel, a member
of the Durban Bar, said the delegation was also disturbed by the
complacency with which its reports were addressed.
In one case,
a lawyer acting for opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai after his
arrest was denied access to his client -- despite being granted
a court order. Alec Muchadehama was then arrested for allegedly
deposing false statements in an affidavit, detained and denied access
to legal representation. He also had his offices searched.
Another lawyer,
Andrew Makoni, was advised that he would be charged with attempt
to defeat the ends of justice arising from statements deposed on
behalf of his clients' bail applications.
When Makoni
attempted to serve a court order on a Chief Inspector Mabunda, Zimbabwe's
assistant commissioner for law and order tore it up, scrunched it
into a ball and threw it into his face. "He ordered me to leave
the office immediately and not to visit the law and order section
again. If I dare visit, he threatened to arrest me," read Makoni's
affidavit.
In March this
year, hundreds of people were "simply rounded up and arrested"
on allegations of being petrol bombers. This happened between 2am
and 5am, without arrest warrants.
Deficit
of evidence
The court judgement
recorded a "deficit of evidence" by the prosecution. No
independent witnesses existed, as was claimed. A farm in South Africa
where the bombers were apparently trained could not be located on
a map. "If this is what is occurring at the level of the administration
of justice, everything bodes very poorly for the
2008 election."
Gabriel said
the current state of affairs is largely due to the actions of the
Zimbabwe Republic Police, who act with the sanction of members of
the executive.
Dr Overs Banda,
honorary treasurer of the Law Society of Zambia, called on the Southern
African Development Community and the international community to
come to Zimbabwe's aid. "As far as the executive is concerned,
there is no problem. But the people say otherwise. Zimbabwe needs
outside help."
The deputy executive
dean at the University of South Africa's college of law, Professor
Danny Titus, said there is a need to step out of national boundaries
and cooperate. "The human rights framework on the continent
is being questioned when it comes to the soft gloves with which
we are treating Zimbabwe."
Titus said that
secretary in the Justice Ministry David Mangota had welcomed the
opportunity to air his views and reacted to the complaints "in
the typical Pik Botha way".
He said Mangota
blamed lack of understanding on the part of the outside world, as
well as colonialism for the country's state of affairs.
The three delegation
members disagreed with arguments that pressure from the outside
was being used by the Zimbabwean government to justify the "extraordinary
steps" it was taking.
"They are
acting in self-defence against whom? The Zimbabwean government's
problem is themselves," said Banda.
Said Gabriel:
"Somebody has to take responsibility for the internal collapse
of the rule of law. [It] cannot lie anywhere but in the hands of
the Zimbabwean government."
The delegation's
findings were based on interviews conducted in Harare over five
days in August with members of NGOs, the legal profession, the Chief
Justice and the Judge President of Zimbabwe. The delegation was
also given access to court records.
The minister
of home affairs failed to keep his appointment. The Attorney General,
with whom the delegation had a meeting, confirmed in writing, "just
ignored" them.
The investigation
was prompted by "repeated reports" of abuse by the constitutionally
created Zimbabwe Republic Police, particularly against members of
the organised legal profession. - Sapa
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