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Defendants
Tortured in Police Custody
Crisis in
Zimbabwe Coalition
January
17, 2003
St
Mary’s Member of Parliament Job Sikhala,
Human Rights NGO Forum Lawyer Gabriel Shumba, and his
young brother Bishop Shumba were taken into custody on Tuesday
night, 14 January, in St Mary’s, Chitungwiza.
The three were
moved from St Mary’s to Mbare Police Station then to Harare Law
and Order Section. An urgent court order, issued at 10:30 on the
night of Wednesday, 15 January, granted their lawyers full access
to the three, who previously had been denied contact. In the order,
Justice Paradza also ordered that the two in custody be brought
before the Magistrate within 48 hours of their arrest, or by 11pm
on Thursday 16 January.
On Thursday
afternoon, the three appeared before the court. Sikhala reported
that he had been electrocuted, with electrodes placed on his tongue,
feet and genitals. Gabriel Shumba was also severely injured. The
Court ordered that the two receive medical attention immediately.
On Friday morning, they were taken to Parirenyatwa Hospital, where
they were treated, and doctors prepared medical reports of their
injuries. On Friday afternoon, the three appeared again before the
courts. Sikhala’s medical report was read before the court, and
Gabriel Shumba gave evidence about the torture he had suffered in
police custody. He reported that he had also been electrocuted,
with the electrodes being placed on his tongue, feet and genitals.
The prosecution
stated that the medical reports, and the defense statements were
to be forwarded to the Commissioner of Police and the Attorney General’s
Office for a full investigation.
The three were
released on Friday afternoon on $30,000 bail each. A further bail
condition for Job Sikhala and Gabriel Shumba was that they were
ordered to surrender their passports. The three have been remanded
until 4 February 2003. They were charged with violating Section
5.2 of the Public Order and Security Act (POSA), attempting to subvert
the constitutional government unconstitutionally.
The Crisis in
Zimbabwe Coalition rejects POSA as an unjust law meant to suppress
people’s collective voice and to deny Zimbabweans their constitutionally
guaranteed freedoms of speech, assembly, and movement. Moreover,
the Coalition condemns these arrests, and the brutal treatment which
the defendants suffered while in police custody.
For more information:
Tel/Fax: +263-(0)4-747810
Email: crisis-zim@transparency.org.zw
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition fact
sheet
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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