|
Back to Index
Zimbabwe's
warped justice system, an instrument for political suppression
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
May 12, 2010
For more than one year,
serious treason charges have hung over the head of Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC-T) Treasurer General and Deputy Agriculture
Minister designate, Roy Bennett. Police arrested Bennett in February
2009 on the eve of his swearing in and charged him with treason,
banditry and sabotage. If convicted, the MDC-T official faced a
death sentence. However, on the 10th of May 2010,Bennet was acquitted
on grounds of lack of substantial evidence from the prosecution
led by Attorney General, Johannes Tomana.
Bennett 's
case is just one example of how the government of Zimbabwe, which
ZANU-PF controls despite the consummation of a power -sharing
agreement, the Inter-Party
Political Agreement (IPA). ZANU-PF retains excessive power,
using the partisan courts and judicial officials aligned to it as
instruments to persecute any real or perceived opponents. President
Robert Mugabe and ZANU-PF have a long history of abusing the justice
system as an instrument of suppression. For instance, soon after
Zimbabwe attained independence in 1980,Zimbabwe African People's
Union (ZAPU) leader Joshua Nkomo was slapped with political motivated
treason charges for alleged leading dissidents in Matebeleland and
Midlands provinces.
Spurious treason
charges were laid against several leading political figures including
the Movement for Movement Change (MDC-T) President Morgan Tsvangirai,
Secretary General Tendai Biti, the late Ransom Gasela and Professor
Welshman Ncube. Civil society leaders such as Jestina Mukoko, Director
of Zimbabwe Peace
Project (ZPP) were also subjected to trumped up treason charges
and persecution by the judiciary. Student leader Mehluli Dube was
at one point arrested and detained under similar charges. Ordinary
Zimbabweans who dared criticize Mugabe's old age and misrule
were also subjected to persecution, and often accused of seeking
to unseat a democratically elected President'.
It is unacceptable that
the Attorney General's office is abusing taxpayers'
money to subject perceived ZANU-PF opponents to harassment, intimidation
and torture. One would recall that in 2008 scores of activities
were abducted, slapped with bogus treason charges, hauled to court
and denied their basic freedoms for more than three months before
being released and the charges dropped. The same is true of the
2007 trumped up charges against senior MDC officials, Dennis Murira
and Members of Parliament, Paul Madzore among others.
The continued
abuse of the notorious Section 121 of the Criminal
Law (Reform and Codification) Act by the Attorney General's
office in cases involving MDC supporters and members of civil society
organizations in an indication of how the courts have ceased to
be impartial and professional but have turned into platforms through
which ZANU-PF settles political scores. The same is true of the
notorious Public
Order and Security Act (POSA) which is used to curtail fundamental
freedoms. Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) statistics show that the state
failed t prosecute 792 human rights defenders arrested under POSA
between 2003 and 2009.police have thus incarcerated innocent people
for long periods of time without legal justification.
ZANU-PF, through
the use of draconian laws such as POSA and compromised courts, has
sought to suppress political opponents and to quell dissent without
due regard to the fundamental rights of individuals. In a democratic
country, the rights of all individuals should be respected and upheld
regardless of their political affiliation or position in society.
It is important for the
inclusive government to ensure concrete and meaningful institutional
reforms. The country should move towards democratic consolidation
where the rule of law is upheld, draconian laws are repealed and
institutions such as the security organs of the state which have
been used in the past as political tools are sanitized. Only then
can the country transit to democracy.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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
|