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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on WOZA Valentine's Day arrests 2006
181
women and children arrested in Bulawayo and more than 70 women and
children arrested in Harare
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
February 14, 2006
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Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights |
On
13 February 2006, approximately one hundred and eighty one (181)
human rights defenders, under the banner of Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), in central Bulawayo were arrested
as they were dispersing from a peaceful protest. The detainees have
been charged with violating section 24 of the notorious Public Order
and Security Act for participating in an unsanctioned procession,
which charges they deny.
ZLHR has been
advised and expresses its outrage that those arrested were exposed
to heavy rains and the harsh elements as they were detained in the
open police courtyard at Bulawayo Central police station for several
hours before being moved to cells at around 22:30hrs. Such treatment
is inhuman and degrading and flies in the face of basic fundamental
rights that are due to all human beings, including the Constitution
of Zimbabwe and the Basic Principles for the Treatment of Prisoners
(1990) which provide that all detainees shall be treated with the
respect due to their inherent dignity and value as human beings
and shall not be subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment or
punishment.
Among those
currently incarcerated are fourteen (14) infants. This is a direct
violation of accused persons’ rights in that, no female detainee
who is breastfeeding a baby shall be detained without the authority
of the Officer Commanding the Province, who must examine each case
and decide on the necessity of detention. There is no indication
that such an investigation was carried out in the present case.
ZLHR strongly condemns this flagrant disregard of the rights of
infants by putting their health and that of their mothers at risk
through mass detentions. The arrested persons have been released
today and the police
On 14 February
2006, over twenty (20) uniformed police, armed with baton sticks,
and some sporting full riot gear, arrested 192 women from WOZA and
five (5) infants in Harare at lunchtime today (14 February 2006)
as they gathered in the city centre as part of a peaceful protest
against social and economic injustice facing women in Zimbabwe today.
The women were rounded up and callously loaded into trucks marked
"City of Harare Municipal Police" to be taken to the Law
and Order section at Harare Central police station. Mr. Tafadzwa
Mugabe, a lawyer from the Rapid Reaction Unit of the Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR) who attended to the distress call, was harassed,
verbally abused and finally arrested and bundled into the truck
with his clients. Amongst the detainees are a considerable number
of elderly women, as well as at least one young child of around
4 years of age.
Lawyers from
ZLHR Rapid Reaction Unit are currently attempting to secure their
release at Harare Central police station.
In the circumstances
ZLHR calls upon the Government of the Republic of Zimbabwe through
the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Zimbabwe Republic Police and members
thereof to respect the rights of accused persons and uphold due
process more particularly in that they ought to:
- Acknowledge
with respect to these pre-trial detentions, that Liberty is the
rule, to which detention must be the exception
- Respect the
right of accused persons to be promptly informed of reasons for
arrest and detention, and of any charges against oneself
- Acknowledge
and respect the right of the detained hrds to access to and assistance
of a lawyer
To take heed that in the performance of their duty, law enforcement
officials shall respect and protect human dignity and maintain
and uphold the human rights of all persons.
- Acknowledge
and respect the rights of these hrds to assemble, associate and
freely express their opinions without hindrance.
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fact sheet
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