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General
concerns of lawyers on arrests and detentions so far
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR)
June 04, 2003
Zimbabwe Lawyers
For Human Rights has been monitoring the human rights issues arising
out of the ongoing peoples expression and based on its observations
on the general arrests that have taken place so far, releases this
statement;
- there are
credible reports that a significant number of the arrests and
detentions are arbitrary.
- the army,
CIO and PISI are arresting people and handing them over to the
law and order section for investigations. The law enforcement
agents have therefore fallen into the error of arresting first
and investigating later in contravention of constitutional and
other legislative safeguards preventing such action.
- the police
are not fully cooperating with the lawyers with the normal excuse
by the officers in charge of the police stations where people
are detained being that they are merely providing accommodation
to the detainees at the requests of the law and order section
of the police force. Lawyers are not allowed access to clients
in the absence of permission from the law and order section of
the police force. This violates or compromises the rights of accused
persons to have unimpeded access to their lawyers.
- the police
in most cases are over detaining accused persons. Most of the
detainees are detained in excess of the 48-hour period. The fact
of arresting before investigating is compounding this problem.
- The detainees
are not being allowed in the majority of cases access to their
families; neither are they being provided with food or medical
treatment.
- the detainees
are being detained in extremely squalid conditions where there
is generally poor sanitation, ventilation and hygiene. More specifically
the cells are over crowded, in instances with 40 inmates in a
cell designed to accommodate 6 inmates; some sewers are blocked
and urine, water and other human waste finds itself into the cells
like at Goromonzi police station which Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human
Rights visited to do a spot random check; there usually are no
adequate blankets in the cells. In short the conditions are degrading
and inhuman which violates the Constitution of Zimbabwe and other
international instruments that the government has signed and ratified
like the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights, the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the Universal Declaration
on Human Rights.
- there have
been credible reports of torture, assault, violence and general
intimidation of the people by the state machinery so far.
- the police
in many cases have opposed bail when it is not justifiable to
adopt such a position.
ZLHR therefore
calls upon the police to comply with the legal requirement of having
a reasonable suspicion that an offence has been committed before
arresting anyone. The police must allow accused persons unimpeded
access to their lawyers as well as access to members of their family.
The police have a responsibility to feed detainees, provide medical
treatment where it is required, and to ensure that any detained
person is not subjected to inhuman and/or degrading treatment. Further
ZLHR reminds the police that torture is seen as a serious offence
and human rights violation in international law and might open up
violators to international prosecution. Over-detention must also
be stopped forthwith. Detention must only be used as a last resort
where it is absolutely essential to do so in the interest of the
law. Even though the police may be seeing themselves as going through
a challenging period in the history of their profession, they must
remain professional, objective and impartial in the discharge of
their responsibilities. Anything less is not acceptable.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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