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ZLHR
dismayed at the gross disregard of court orders by the State and
the City of Harare: Tsiga grounds and Ground No. 5, Mbare
Zimbabwe Lawyers For Human Rights (ZLHR)
November 26, 2005
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR) is increasingly disturbed by the failure
by the City of Harare and the state to comply with orders emanating
from Zimbabwe's courts of law. On Monday the 10th of October, ZLHR
obtained a provisional order before Justice Omerjee of the High
Court of Zimbabwe at Harare which order precluded the City of Harare
and the Zimbabwe Republic Police from evicting or threatening to
evict the occupants of Tsiga grounds and Ground No. 5 in Mbare,
Harare. In an act exhibiting brutal inhumanity timed to have effects
as cruel as possible, municipal police assisted by National Youth
militia pounced upon our clients at midnight of 13-14 November and
spent the 1st 6 hours of the 14th day of November 2005 violently
carting away our clients to Hopley Farm, a farm just outside Harare,
in blatant contravention of the court order. Showing the municipal
police the court order only served to earn one individual the threat
of a beating.
To show contempt
for the judiciary in the manner that the local authority and the
state did is an act which goes to the very root of any democratic
system structured to protect even the barest of human rights. The
principle of separation of powers is a basic element in any justice
system that takes concepts of justice and democracy beyond the barren
realm of lip service. However, when local government personnel and
state-sanctioned actors like the National Youth service militia
choose to ignore the judgement of a court of law, they negate this
principle and take on the role of the judge and enforcer of their
own matters. It is therefore sad that local and national leaders
who should all lead by example find it apt to exhibit utter disregard
for court orders and that these erstwhile leaders should choose
to take the law into their own hands. This is a precedent which,
if followed by society at large, no doubt only serves to precipitate
social disintegration. The right to the protection of the law enshrined
in our constitution is rendered impotent when the state sanctions
or condones such disregard of its court decisions. Thus the rule
of law ceases to exist; even the court action brought by ZLHR has
been derailed as having been overtaken by (unlawful) events. This
only serves to destroy the faith of the citizenry in the justice
system, thus hastening national descent into lawlessness.
It is with heightened
dismay that Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights further notes the
violence and the timing of this hideous act undermining the dignity
and integrity of the victims. These factors clearly render this
act cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment in contravention of section
15 of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, customary international law
and as oft repeated and emphasized in various other international
agreements including the Universal Declaration on Human Rights and
the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights. These are people
who have already been rendered homeless and already have had problems
earning a livelihood and accessing basic health and other infrastructure
as a result of Operation Murambatsvina. Such actions only serve
to worsen their plight. The forced evictions themselves amount to
psychological torture; it should be noted that there were numerous
children unlawfully relocated in this manner.
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights deplores the use of militias of the National Youth
service programme in this exercise of anarchist behaviour. It is
sad when militarised forces of no legal legitimacy such as these
are used to undermine the decisions of the judiciary and the rights
of poor vulnerable people as happened in this instance.
That the forced
relocation of people constitutes a contravention of international
law admits of no doubt, never mind how done. It therefore becomes
all the more disheartening that it was done in such a cruel manner
and in direct contravention of a court order. Forced relocation
of people into a particular area as is the case at Hopley farm brings
to mind most unfortunate images of colonial Zimbabwe which images
are inconsistent with the human rights based democratic dispensation
in which Zimbabwe ought to have found itself by now. Indeed, forced
relocation of people into these obscure places hinders their access
to justice as even contact between such victims and their legal
practitioners as well as other legal facilities is compromised.
Thus a social mode of discrimination in terms of access to justice
and other amenities is fashioned by the state's forced relocation
of vulnerable persons in society.
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights therefore expresses its consternation and calls
upon the state (Zimbabwe) and the City of Harare to respect court
orders and allow the law to take its course. Further, we call upon
these actors to respect the dignity and integrity of the human person
and forthwith cease the crude use of force upon the defenceless
and disadvantaged populace of Zimbabwe. The state is also called
upon to desist from dumping people in peripheral areas where they
suffer devastating hunger and illness and it is well nigh impossible
to make a livelihood for whatever reason.
Visit the ZLHR fact
sheet
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