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A
continuing purge of students' rights with impunity
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
July 10, 2007
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR) is deeply concerned by the relentless attacks
against students at the University
of Zimbabwe by the university authorities and security guards
backed by members of the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP).
ZLHR is aware that on
27 June 2007 the Department of Accommodation and Catering Services
at the University gave students notice to pay an additional Accommodation
fee of ZW $1 000 000.00 (One Million) by 29 June 2007, failing which
they would be evicted from halls of residence. The additional accommodation
fees arose from the extension of the semester by another month following
strikes by lecturers over failure by the university to pay them
adequately. The students had already paid $350 000.00 for the four
month semester and were now being ordered to pay $1 000 000.00 for
just one month.
In response
to the threat against the students of forced evictions and the high
probability of their preparations for examinations starting on 16
July 2007 being disrupted, ZLHR filed an urgent chamber application
seeking an order that any eviction of the students be barred and
that they be allowed to continue residing at the university until
they finished writing their examinations on the 28th of July 2007.
Sadly the High Court, presided over by Justice Karwi, was of the
view that the students' plight and threatened eviction was
not urgent; he dismissed the urgent application and advised the
applicants to proceed by way of a normal court application, as there
was no urgency at hand.
On 9 July 2007 at around
1400hrs a notice was issued ordering all students at the University
of Zimbabwe out of their halls of residence by 1500hrs the same
day, giving students not more than an hour to pack their belongings
of a year and move off campus. Members of the ZRP riot police section,
and university security guards went about forcefully evicting the
students, assaulting many in the process. Scores of students were
thus evicted from their halls of residence and left stranded at
the bus terminus area adjacent to their halls of residence. The
students were forced to spend the cold winter night there, some
losing their property to thieves in the night. Even sadder was the
plight of women students being exposed to sexual exploitation by
'good Samaritans' who offered them the "comfort"
of their homes, preying on their hopeless situation.
ZLHR deplores the use
of violence against unarmed students by the university authorities
and members of the ZRP, and the ensuing destruction of property,
both belonging to students and that of the university, especially
in light of the current economic climate and the lack of resources
available to the university for any reconstruction.
Six student leaders were
also arrested on 7 July 2007 in the melee, namely Caesar Sitiya,
Tatenda Chiuya., Shaun Matsheza, Shingai Brian Chikomba, Thabani
Mthokozisi Moyo and Manifest Fortune Jabuli. After initially being
denied access to their lawyers, they were detained over the weekend
at the Law and Order section of Harare Central police station and
were only released on Z$ 1million bail each on Tuesday 10 July 2007.
They face charges of malicious damage to property, which they deny,
and will appear in court again on 1 August 2007.
On 10 July 2007 ZLHR
project lawyer for public interest litigation, Mr Rangu Nyamurundira,
filed another urgent chamber application seeking the stopping of
the forced evictions and that students be allowed to return to their
halls of residence until they finish their examinations. The matter
is still pending before the court.
ZLHR express its regret
and concern over the initial decision by the High Court that the
matter and plight of the students was considered not to be urgent,
therefore leaving the students open to the now effected forced eviction
by the University of Zimbabwe and the ZRP.
The University
of Zimbabwe is an administrative authority which is bound by the
Administrative Justice Act [Chapter 10:28], which Act provides under
its section 3 that an administrative authority which has the responsibility
or power to take any administrative action which may affect the
rights, interests or legitimate expectation of any person shall
act lawfully and in a fair manner. Clearly the University of Zimbabwe
has continued to act with impunity in a grossly unfair, unreasonable
and illegal manner in contravention of the principles of natural
justice against the students. Furthermore principles of natural
justice demand that an affected party be given the right to be heard
before an administrative decision affecting her/his rights is taken.
It is quite clear that the arbitrary decision of the university
is ultra vires the Administrative Act and the Constitution
of Zimbabwe.
The courts are failing
to protect the rights and interests of the students as guaranteed
in the Administrative Justice Act and in several domestic, regional
and international human rights instruments which guarantee their
right to education, shelter, protection against forced evictions,
and protection from inhuman and degrading treatment.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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