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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Eroding
rights to liberty & law protection: AG's office denying bail
as matter of policy
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
June 11, 2008
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR) has noted with alarm the expressed intention
of the Attorney-General (AG) to "deny bail to all suspects
arrested on charges of either committing or inciting political violence".
In a front-page story headlined "AG's Office Gets Tough:
No bail for political violence cases" reported in The Herald
on Monday 9 June 2008, as well as in repeated television interviews
on the state-run broadcaster, the Deputy AG (Criminal Division),
Mr. Johannes Tomana, was quoted saying: "We have made it a
point that those arrested are locked up right to trial. Bail is
opposed as a matter of policy".
The statement
by Mr. Tomana expressing the intention of the AG's Office
to "deny bail" to accused persons as a matter of policy
is regrettable and unfortunate, as it clearly confuses the role
of the AG's office with that of the final arbiter, the judiciary.
In terms of
the Constitution
of Zimbabwe, all accused persons have a fundamental right to
be presumed innocent until proven guilty by a court of law. They
also have the right to protection of the law and the right to their
liberty as guaranteed in sections 18 and 11, respectively. Bail
is an entitlement that is provided to accused persons to ensure
that, from the time of their arrest to the finalization of their
trial, their right to liberty is not unreasonably and unnecessarily
violated. Thus an accused person has a right to apply for bail before
the criminal court, which bail must, in the interests of justice,
be granted where an accused person has convinced the court that:
- s/he is
of fixed and known abode and is not likely to abscond from attending
trial if set free on bail;
- s/he will
not interfere with the witnesses or evidence while on bail; and
- s/he will
not commit further offences while on bail.
Further, when
bail is applied for, the State as represented by the AG's
office, cannot simply oppose the granting of such bail without providing
the court with substantive and credible reason/s (supported by evidence)
for such opposition. It would have to convince the court that there
is a material likelihood that the accused may flee from justice
if released on bail, interfere with witnesses, or commit further
offences. It is then solely within the mandate and function of the
court and not the AG's office to decide, on the basis of the
evidence before it, whether bail should be granted. These are elementary
tenets of criminal procedure and constitutional law.
The State, as
represented by the AG's office, now seeks to unilaterally
remove in totality the right to even make an application for bail
by publicizing its intention to make it mandatory that no bail is
granted at all to those arrested on the mere suspicion of "political
violence". To simply "deny bail as a matter of policy"
because the crimes for which accused is charged amount to political
violence is clearly unconstitutional.
All and any
criminal acts of violence, whether politically motivated or otherwise,
and whoever the perpetrator, are deplorable and must be discouraged.
The perpetrators, where known, must be prosecuted impartially and
within a reasonable time. This discourages repetition of the offences,
provides redress to victims, whilst punishment of perpetrators counters
the unacceptable impunity which is so rife in our society. However,
as a civilized nation which purports to adhere to the rule of law
and the principle of separation of powers, there must, of necessity,
be compliance with our Constitution and accepted international human
rights norms and standards which act as safeguards for all people
of Zimbabwe where they, as accused persons, face the might of the
State and its resources.
It is therefore
unacceptable at law and in practice for the State, through the AG's
office, to override the function of the judiciary, by issuing widely
publicized policy decisions to deny bail without just and reasonable
cause. This usurps the functions of the judiciary, and places unacceptable
executive pressure on an independent arm of government.
With the reality
that the wheels of criminal justice in Zimbabwe's courts turn
slowly, such a process would mean that accused persons, constitutionally
presumed innocent, would have to spend long periods of time in remand
prison before even being heard. Indeed Zimbabwe's remand prisons
are on record for keeping people on remand for unacceptably long
periods of time, from months to as much as nine years. This has
been highlighted and condemned by the Judge President of the High
Court of Zimbabwe, Rita Makarau.
The effect of
such denials of bail was witnessed following the 29 March 2008 elections
when Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) officials who had been
charged with fraud and other offences were denied bail in areas
such as Masvingo, Zaka and Buhera, yet to date their trials have
not taken off due to the state still gathering and preparing its
witnesses and evidence. The reason given by the public prosecutors
for denying the ZEC officials bail was not one of genuine fear that
the accused would breach bail conditions but simply that they had
received instruction to deny bail from "higher powers".
This policy
change by the AGs office to deny bail without just cause comes at
a time when many are preparing to cast their vote in the presidential
election run-off set for 27 June 2008. This means that those who
are arrested now and denied bail may be kept in remand prisons for
weeks or months, thereby resulting in them failing to cast their
vote from within the prison cells. This unprecedented policy by
the AG's office thus stands to deny many Zimbabweans who may
in fact be innocent of any criminal offence their right to participate
in the governance of their country through voting or campaigning
for their political party.
ZLHR is further
saddened that the Deputy AG's statement expresses insensitivity
of the pitiful state of our prisons wherein prisoners, including
the innocent and still to be proven guilty, are living in inhuman
and degrading conditions. The Deputy Attorney General in fact admits
to the overcrowding, stating that the condemning of accused persons
to remand without any hope of bail "is going to choke the
prison population . . . .Jail is not nice. It is not meant to be
nice". Zimbabwe's prisons are indeed already battling
to provide prisoners with adequate clothing, food and health care.
The attitude
of officials in the Ministry of Justice, Legal & Parliamentary
Affairs further exhibits the inability to accept state obligations
and comply with constitutional provisions. Instead of addressing
the conditions of prisons, Mr. Chinamasa expressed his intention,
as reported in The Herald on 10 June 2008, to propose an amnesty
"in order to create space for those convicted of political
violence".
ZLHR calls upon
the Attorney General's office to respect the right to liberty
and protection of the law, and recognize and accept that every accused
person is entitled to apply for bail without such bail being denied
without just cause. In line with this, there should be an immediate
retraction by the AG's office of public statements made, and
a public reaffirmation that it is the constitutional duty of the
courts, and not the AG's office, to decide whether an accused
person is a fit candidate for bail. ZLHR further calls upon the
courts not to be intimidated by such public pronouncements and executive
pressure, and to continue to safeguard and protect the right to
liberty of accused persons by granting them bail where there is
just cause to do so.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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