|
Back to Index
Freedom
of expression on trial
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
September 25, 2006
The Trustees of the Voice
of the People (VOP) will be standing trial this week beginning
25 September 2006. We believe the trial will take place in Court
Room 4( if this is not so, the court clerk will advise you upon
arrival) at the Rotten Row Court in Harare, Zimbabwe at 8 am.
In Solidarity, we kindly request your
attendance of at the Court….and join other fellow friends in giving
support to the VOP trustees
The trustees are being represented by
Beatrice Mtetwa of Kantor & Immerman – a Law Society Councillor
and Board Member of Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights
Background
On 15 December 2005 at
around 16h00 members of the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) led by
DETECTIVE ASSISTANT MUKWAIRA and DETECTIVE INSPECTOR MANGWIRO, acting
on the instructions of a SUPERINTENDENT TAVAZIVA, and accompanied
by around nine unidentified police details, descended upon the offices
of VOP armed with a search warrant for the search and seizure of
"radio broadcasting communication equipment and its associated
accessories to include: computer hardware, software and any documents
related to the activities of the radio station. Three women MARIA
NYANYIWA, NYASHA BOSHA and KUNDAI MUGWANDA were arrested and detained
for four days; they were released without charge after the office
of the Attorney General declined to prosecute them.
They had been taken in as ransom, in
order to persuade the Director of VOP, JOHN MASUKU, to turn himself
in. On the 19th of December 2005, John Masuku and David Masunda,
the Chairperson of the VOP reported to the police station in the
company of their lawyers TAFADZWA MUGABE and RANGU NYAMURUNDIRA.
Masunda was not detained, however Masuku was then detained for four
days only to appear in court on the 23rd of December 2005, to answer
to charges of contravening Section 27 of the Broadcasting Services
Act. Masuku is currently out of custody on a ZW$ 4 million bail
and reports every Friday to the Law and Order Section at Harare
Central Police Station. During that same period the DETECTIVE INSPECTOR
MAVUNDA indicated the intention of the police to interrogate the
Board of Trustees of VOP.
Arrests of the Trustees
The trustees of the Voice of
the People presented themselves at the Law and Order section of
the Harare Central police station at 08h00 on Tuesday 24 January
2006. The trustees are David Masunda, Arnold Tsunga, Lawrence
Chibwe, Nhlanhla Ngwenya, Millicent Phiri and Isabella Matambanadzo.
This followed raids carried out at the homes of two of the trustees
(Arnold Tsunga and Nhlanhla Ngwenya) on Saturday and the unlawful
arrest and detention of two persons, Emmanuel Kamba (an employee
of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights) and Charles Nyamufukudzwa
(a caretaker at the residence of Arnold Tsunga), who were present
when the police unlawfully entered Tsunga’s property.
The Charges
The trustees signed warned and cautioned statements in relation
to an investigation of an alleged contravention of section 7(1)
as read with paragraph (4) and (5) of the Broadcasting
Services Act, which they denied. The relevant sections read
as follows:
7 Broadcasting and signal carrier
licences
(1) Subject to this Act,
and the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation Act [Chapter 12:01], no
person shall provide a broadcasting service or operate as a signal
carrier in Zimbabwe except in accordance with a broadcasting licence
or a signal carrier licence, as the case may be…
(4) Any person who contravenes subsection
(1) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to?
(a) a fine not exceeding five million dollars or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding two years, where the offence involves
the unlicensed provision of any broadcasting service referred to
in paragraphs (a) to (f) of subsection (2); or
(b) a fine not exceeding level ten or to imprisonment for a period
not exceeding three months, where the offence involves the unlicensed
provision of any broadcasting service referred to in paragraphs
(g) to (j) of subsection (2)
or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
(5) In addition to any punishment it may impose under subsection
(4) and without derogation from its powers under any enactment,
a court convicting a person of contravening subsection (1) shall
declare forfeited to the State any equipment or apparatus used for
the purpose of or in connection with the offence.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|