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The
plight of juveniles in prisons must be addressed
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
March 17, 2009
Zimbabwe Lawyers for
Human Rights (ZLHR) is concerned by the plight of children charged
with criminal offences and brought before Zimbabwe's sadly
collapsing criminal justice system. Such a plight was recently highlighted
in cases wherein ZLHR represented three (3) sixteen year (16) old
juvenile offenders. The three juveniles (herein referred to as P,
S, T) where detained at Marondera Remand Prison when their plight
came to the knowledge of ZLHR on 9 March 2009. Upon investigation
into their matters it became apparent from court records that there
had been numerous children's rights violations as well as
serious oversights that culminated in the wrongful and prolonged
detention of the three juveniles. The rights and safeguards accorded
juvenile offenders in our criminal justice system as well as the
various international standards and norms were being totally ignored.
One of the juveniles,
P, brought before Marondera Magistrates Court had not only been
forced to conduct his own defence without the assistance of a guardian
or court appointed probation officer as required by law but had
also been continuously remanded in abstentia for over 6 months while
awaiting sentence for stealing a chicken. Compounding P's
misfortune was the fact that Marondera Prison wherein he was detained
was designed as an adult prison facility and the result was that
P was abused by older cell mates. The other juvenile offender, S,
had languished in remand prison for 3 months primarily because the
Public Prosecution had failed and or neglected to comply with a
court order to find a probation officer to investigate his personal
circumstances. The last juvenile offender, T, was also remanded
in custody just because the prosecution wanted to see a birth certificate
which birth certificate he could not collect from his grandfather
in rural Buhera, ironically because he was now detained in custody.
The law requires that juvenile facing criminal charges must be released
in the custody of their parent or guardian or into the custody of
a social welfare authority. In this case, all three juveniles are
orphans and had no legal guardian in whose custody they could be
released. In the end, ZLHR had to find a home in which to have them
placed after being granted bail on 16 March 2009.
While the Marondera Provincial
Magistrate commended the efforts made in seeking to protect and
promote the rights of persons in places of detention, especially
children; ZLHR believes that more should be done to guarantee the
rights of all accused persons, especially their right to liberty
and to protection of the law, more so when juvenile offenders are
involved. There is need for the State, through the judiciary, to
be more considerate of the social and economic circumstances of
each accused person. While the Court has been more than willing
to keep minors in remand prisons simply because there is no guardian
to release them to, the very same minors, prior to being incarcerated,
have for years been living as adults fending for themselves after
being orphaned and with no one to care for them. The court must
strike a balance and consider the best interest of such minors before
subjecting them to the harsh, deplorable and inhumane conditions
that are Zimbabwe prisons.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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