|
Back to Index
Ncube's
Zim citizenship hearing postponed
Mail
& Guardian (SA)
January 24, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=296662&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
Zimbabwe's High Court
in Harare has postponed hearing Mail & Guardian chief executive
Trevor Ncube's case against the withdrawal of his Zimbabwean citizenship.
The Zimbabwean government
is preventing Ncube -- who publishes the Standard and the Zimbabwe
Independent in that country -- from renewing his passport, claiming
he is not a Zimbabwean citizen. The grounds are that Ncube's father
was born in Zambia.
Ncube's lawyer
in Zimbabwe, Sternford Moyo, of the firm Scanlen and Holderness,
told the M&G Online that the postponement came after "we
successfully applied to introduce into the [court] record an opinion
by a Zambian advocate in response to the allegations" by Registrar
General Tobaiwa Mudede.
The advocate, Nchima
Nchito, is an expert in Zambian law, and Moyo said "instead
of us non-Zambian lawyers arguing about the law, we asked the court
to admit his opinion".
"The effect of
the opinion is to refute that [allegation] . . . that Mr Ncube
is recognised as a Zambian citizen," Moyo said.
He said the
state asked for a postponement so it could "reconsider its
position in light of the Zambian advocate's opinion".
"I
have approached the court for protection because I am confident
that the court will apply itself to the arguments placed before
it in a fair and just manner," Ncube said in a statement to
the M&G Online on Tuesday in Johannesburg before addressing
a press conference on the matter.
He said he would not
be travelling to Zimbabwe for the court case, as he was "concerned
that they would impound my passport".
Ncube also said the decision
by Mudede to strip him of his citizenship had rendered him "stateless".
Mudede's action had interfered
with his freedom of movement and he could not manage his business
interests in Zimbabwe. He was also not able to visit his parents
and brothers and sisters who are still in Zimbabwe.
"I am concerned
that on an everyday basis many Zimbabweans of Malawian, Zambian,
Mozambican, British and Australian parentage are being subjected
to humiliation by the registrar general's office," Ncube said.
"Indeed, many less
fortunate than I am have been unable to go through this process,
meaning that they have been denied the right to passports, the base
document symbolising citizenship."
Ncube will ask
the court to direct the home affairs minister to confirm that he
is a citizen of Zimbabwe and order the registrar general to renew
his passport within three days of a court order being granted.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|