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Zimbabwe Briefing - Issue 88
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
(SA Regional Office)
August 22, 2012
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Resourcing
The Prosecuting Authority: Beyond The AG/NPA Constitutional Debate
Forget for a moment, the lofty constitutional statements on judicial
independence. Put aside for a moment, the perennial claims and counterclaims
in respect of the Rule of Law. Ignore for a moment, the dispute
over whether the new constitution should introduce a new National
Prosecuting Authority (NPA) or the current Attorney General's
Office (AG's Office) should continue in its present form.
The problem
is less in the words of a constitution but more in the attitude
and the practice of those that are charged with the authority to
govern. It is what I have often referred to as the "Human
Factor" in governance; that you can have all the beautiful
constitutions, laws and regulations in the world but if you do not
ad-dress the impact arising from the human agents - the people
- who are charged with power and responsibilities to implement
the laws, then there is unlikely to be positive change.
There is a story in the press reporting that close to 140 of the
200 public prosecutors in Zimbabwe are members of the Zimbabwe Republic
Police, the Zimbabwe Prison Service and the Zimbabwe National Army
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/news-8815-Police,+army+officers+used+as+prosecutors/news.aspx.
This means that
70% of the public prosecutors are members of the security services
who are working in an otherwise civilian role. The report suggests
that they have been brought in to cover a shortage of prosecutors
in the justice system. This situation is untenable and is represents
a serious assault on the principle of keeping the security services
separate from the civilian institutions. All the claims of non-interference
of the security services in the civilian affairs become hollow talk
when it is clear that the involvement of the security services personnel
is legalised and condoned at the very basic level where ordinary
people are affected on a day to day basis. It is part of a culture
that normalises security services interference in civilian matters
and it becomes hard to blame them for thinking that their role is
legitimate.
The trouble is all too often when we deal with issues of the justice
system and judicial independence, we focus on the high level parts
of the judicial system (the High Court and the Supreme Court) and
forget the really crucial bits that impact on the ordinary people
on a day to day basis (the Magistrates' Courts) and the public
prosecution service. This is the arena in which ordinary people
interact and meet with the law and the justice system on a daily
basis, oft-times unpleasant collisions in dark, dingy corridors
and courtrooms . . . and waterless facilities that assault all
senses.
It is in the
Magistrates' Courts where the bulk of the law is played out,
every day of the working week; a domain in which justice and injustice
alike largely go unnoticed; hardly re-ported unless the odd case
in newspaper pages. Still, thousands of cases go unnoticed; every
minute the just slip under the radar.
Many accused
persons suffer prejudice in these lower echelons of the justice
system, not just because they are not legally represented but because
their cases are handled by pseudo-prosecutors that are less than
competent - and it is not their fault. They are asked to fill
a role whose requirements are not matched by their skills set. So
while the political parties haggle over whether to continue with
the present AG's Office or to create a new NPA in the new
Constitution, the real challenge is still to build the operational
capacity of this critical office, by whatever name it is called,
to ensure that it is able to attract and retain competent staff
and
. . . to pay
more attention to the Magistrates Courts where real people collide,
often violently against each other and against the law. And yet
you have grown men and women investing hours and acres of space
fighting for the retention the AG's Office in the present
form. The current Draft
Constitution separates the AG's Office from the newly created
National Prosecuting Authority. ZANU PF, we read from the media,
is opposed to this proposition, preferring instead to retain the
AG's office in its present form. The MDC-T and the MDC-N accept
the Draft Constitution's formulation. But as these press reports
indicate, the problem is way beyond how the creature is referred
to or structured in the Constitution. Whether it is called the NPA
or the AG, the critical point is that the prosecuting authority's
independence must be guaranteed
in the Constitution but more importantly, it must have the capacity
and resources to execute its role through professionally trained
and suitably competent staff.
It would be
time well spent if men and women haggle over how many resources
to put into these critical services as opposed to fighting over
whether the constitution should maintain an office of the AG or
create an NPA. Calling it the AG or the NPA or indeed creating both
offices is unlikely to change anything unless politicians start
looking at matters of substance over form. The real challenge is
resourcing the prosecuting authority; creating a civilian prosecuting
authority that can attract and retain legal talent which is guided
by professionalism. The present set up in which the office has to
rely on members of the security services is untenable and does not
augur well with the principles of separation between the security
and civilian institutions. The moral leverage of accusing the security
services of interfering in civilian affairs is lost when the civilian
authorities have to so heavily depend on the security services.
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