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Being
political is OK, says Zim's new prosecutor general
Mail and Guardian
November 15, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-11-15-00-being-political-is-ok-tomana
The Mail &
Guardian's Harare correspondent interviewed new prosecutor general
Johannes Tomana to discuss his alleged favouritism of Zanu-PF officials
in his previous position as attorney general and to ask him about
the National Prosecuting Authority of Zimbabwe, which has not yet
been set up.
What
is the anticipated impact on your office of the creation of new
institutions, as set out in the Constitution, such as the National
Prosecuting Authority?
It takes time
to put the legal framework in place and that has been ongoing. You
can't have the authority without the National Prosecuting Authority
Act. There must be a legal framework to give effect to the Act.
No one can say what would be the impact before the institutions
have been put in place. As of now, it's premature to talk about
that.
Most
sectors in Zimbabwe have been hit by a brain drain owing to the
economic and political crisis that has engulfed the country since
2000. What is the situation in your office?
Because of brain drain we are thin on the ground. We have to improve
to attract the relevant numbers. We are working under capacity.
Not all posts are filled.
One
of the prosecutors in your office, Richard Chikosha, was in the
past assaulted by an investigating officer after he lost a case
against some Movement for Democratic Change members in court. What
is the relationship between prosecutors and law enforcement agents
after this incident?
I was never
made aware of the case, if ever it happened. But anyone who thinks
we win or lose cases is misinformed. It's a wrong impression that
we lose cases or we win cases. We assist in the administration of
justice. We work with intelligence, the judiciary collectively;
all of us have to win for Zimbabwe. If guilty people go to jail
and the innocent are acquitted, we would have won for Zimbabwe,
for all of us.
Problems
of political interference in your office have been reported in the
media. In your view, what can be done to insulate it from these
kinds of accusations?
We are guided
by the docket, the evidence in the docket and the law. No politician
is supposed to do that [interfere]. I would have complained to my
principal if that would have happened. It has not happened, it never
happened.
What
about criticism that you are politically biased?
You are trying
to resuscitate a dead issue that has no substance. I am on record
[as] saying that anyone can come forward and prove that and that
has not been done. What has happened is that I have a job under
the inclusive Constitution.
It's a Constitution that was made by all the parties.
You
have been quoted as saying that you belong to Zanu-PF, but according
to the same Constitution, the holder of your office must be nonpartisan.
Does your understanding
of nonpartisan mean not belonging to a party? It means not supporting
a particular party in the discharge of your duties, and that has
never happened. I have never done that. By the way, do you think
the attorney general must not vote? Is any person disenfranchised?
The Constitution gives everyone their rights, the right to vote,
to associate with a political party of their choice. But I have
not supported any political party when doing my job.
An instance
of that alleged bias has been your office's supposed failure to
prosecute numerous cases emanating from the 2008
electoral violence, where people lost their lives allegedly
at the hands of Zanu-PF - to which you belong.
Why don't you
bring the list of the cases? Why don't you bring the list?
One
case came up in Parliament
last month. An MP mentioned the murder of Dickson Sibamba in Buhera
allegedly by a Zanu-PF MP.
I am not aware
of that case. Go and ask those people if the matter was reported
to the police. If it was reported to the police, go and ask the
police if it was investigated..
What's
your view of the use of lawyers in private practice by a number
of departments such as transport and mines and mining development,
who are paid handsomely?
It's not the
departments that are doing that. I am subcontracting and we brief
… The attorney general would be co-ordinating the private
lawyers. I think I mentioned the issue that we are thin on the ground
and all posts were frozen. Did you want us to leave the cases because
we are thin?.
Wouldn't
it be better if the attorney general's office improved the situation
rather than paid huge sums to private lawyers?
It's about the
economy, the department has frozen all the posts. If the treasury
is able to employ and pay the staff, that would be fine. Before
that, what do you suggest?
On a
different note, you once halted the prosecution of MPs who abused
the Constituency Development Fund in the last Parliament. What is
your position now as the lawmakers appear to have gotten off scot-free?
The answer lies
with the minister of parliamentary affairs. He must do an audit,
and then they bring an audit. Crime must be prosecuted, full stop.
Any
changes in your operations during the period of the inclusive government
and now?
We continue
to operate the way we were operating. I was never doing anything
outside the book; we are still working by the book. Now we expect
we will be able to retain the expertise that we need.
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