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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on enforced disappearances in Zimbabwe
Inclusive government - Index of articles
Political
abductees, violence on farms and rule of law - Peace Watch
Veritas
June 10, 2009
State
revives prosecution of Alec Muchadehama
On Tuesday Alec
Muchadehama, the defence lawyer in the political abductee case now
before the High Court, was served with a summons requiring him to
stand trial at the magistrates court on Thursday 17th June on a
charge of obstructing or defeating the course of justice. This came
only a week after a magistrate refused to remand Mr Muchadehama
on the identical allegations, saying that the State had failed to
establish a reasonable suspicion that Mr Muchadehama had committed
the alleged offence. Lawyers for Human Rights have criticised the
State for blatantly seeking to intimidate and harass him and prevent
him from executing his professional duties by reviving charges against
him while he is acting in an important case. [They served papers
on him at the court instead of his offices where they were addressed.]
"The office of the Attorney General could be better utilizing
resources and energies clearing up the backlog of cases which have
unnecessarily filled up our prisons and prosecuting real, rather
than imaginary criminals."
Trial
of Political Abductees: Defence Seeks Referral to Supreme Court
The High Court
trial did not start on Monday. It was postponed for a day to allow
the presiding judge, Justice Uchena to consider the defence lawyer
Alec Muchadehama's request for a referral to the Supreme Court
to determine:
- whether the
abductees' abduction/ kidnapping constituted unlawful deprivation
of liberty in violation of section 13(1) of the Constitution
- whether the
torture of the abductees constituted inhuman and degrading treatment
in violation of section 15(1) of the Constitution
- whether the
applicants, as victims of enforced disappearances, can lawfully
be prosecuted and whether the abductees can be compelled to go
on trial in circumstances where their appearance at court was
facilitated by a criminal act of kidnapping/ abduction authorized
or sanctioned by the State or officials of the State.
- the defence
application also requested the Supreme Court to direct the Attorney
General to order the Commissioner-General of the Police to institute
a comprehensive and diligent investigation of the offences alleged
to have been committed against each abductee with a view to prosecuting
all perpetrators of the alleged offences before the abductees'
possible prosecution.
Argument on
this request was heard on Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr Muchadehama
argued that to proceed with the criminal trial would be an infringement
of the defendants' constitutional right to protection of the
law and that under section 24(2) of the Constitution, the referral
must be granted unless the judge considers the questions raised
"merely frivolous or vexatious". The prosecutor argued
against this on technicalities that were later proved to be based
on incorrect facts and then fell back on the submission that the
application was frivolous and vexatious without elaborating. Mr
Muchadehama countered this by pointing out the gravity of the human
rights violations which had occurred. The trial is adjourned until
Monday 22nd June when judgment will be given.
Equal
protection of the law essential to peace
Impartial application
of the law is essential to establishing a just and peaceful society.
This is emphasised in the preamble to the Inter-party political
agreement. But there have been too many cases where the law has
turned a blind eye instead of protecting citizens. In many cases
of violence, especially dating from the pre- and post-election time
last year, the perpetrators have never been arrested or brought
to trial, and the victims have never received justice or restitution.
The recently
released Human Rights NGO Forum report
lists 872 incidents of state organised or state condoned violence
during the first four months of this year, including 198 cases of
unlawful detention, 198 cases of unlawful arrest, 4 cases of torture
and 210 cases of political discrimination, intimidation and victimisation.
The Forum states that the report is based on reports that are meticulously
documented but by no means exhaustive. It also calls on the government
"to bring to an end impunity for perpetrators of all human
rights abuses and to ensure the rule of law is upheld" and
on the police "to exercise restraint when dealing with unarmed
protestors, as well as to treat all citizens fairly and within the
confines of the law in the discharge of their duties." The
HR Forum cases include cases of assault, kidnapping, etc. of farmers
and farm workers.
No excuse
for violation of citizens' rights to protection of the law
Neither in Zimbabwean
law nor in international law does the fact that a matter is "political"
or "politically sensitive" justify departures from the
State's duty protect its citizens. In carrying out a political
policy or even in the exercise of enforcing a court order, the law
must be followed: "Every public officer has a duty towards
every person in Zimbabwe to exercise his or her functions as a public
officer in accordance with the law and to observe and uphold the
rule of law." [Constitution, section 18(1a).] Public officers
include all members of the Public Service, the Police Force and
the Defence Forces. A public officer failing in this duty can be
taken to court in his personal capacity and sued for damages caused
by his failure.
This is highly
relevant to the current wave of farm invasions because the use of
violence or threats of violence in the course of such invasions
is unlawful. To force a sitting occupier off a farm is unlawful,
even if the invader claims a right to the land as the holder of
an offer letter or some other authority issued by the Government.
The only lawful method of removing a sitting occupier from the land
is by following due process of law - i.e., by getting an eviction
order from the courts and for that order to be enforced by proper
authority - the deputy sheriff or messenger of court, with
the assistance of the police if necessary. Nothing in the legislation
underpinning the land reform programme says otherwise.
A sitting occupier
has a constitutional right, under section 18(1a) of the Constitution,
to the protection of the State and its officials against unlawful
violence and threats of violence. This is so, whether or not the
occupier holds an offer letter or a High Court order in his favour
and regardless of the merits of any dispute over the right to the
land. Example: if a beleaguered victim of a farm invasion seeks
assistance from the local police member in charge against unlawful
violence and that protection is refused, the victim has a constitutional
right to take civil action claiming damages from the member in charge
in his personal capacity.
It is time the
issue of violence being experienced by people on farms is separated
out from the issue of land reform. Discussion of "farm invasions"
frequently focuses exclusively on the rights and wrongs of the land
reform programme and its disastrous effects on agricultural production,
ignoring or dismissing the subversion of the rule of law, typically
involving illegal self-help measures - violence, threatened
violence, theft etc - taken by or on behalf of the new claimants
to the land, all designed to drive out the sitting occupier.
Violence
on farms since the IPA
The Inter-party
Political Agreement acknowledged that while there was no going back
on land reform, there should be a "comprehensive, transparent
and non-partisan land audit" and that the parties would ensure
"security of tenure to all land holders" [IPA, Article
5]. But this must also be set in the context of the Preamble to
the IPA which, when referring to land, emphasises "the centrality
of issues relating to the rule of law, respect for human rights,
democracy and governance". Since the IPA was signed there
has been a whole series of violent incidents on farms - against
farmers and their workers:- shot/wounded/murdered, 5; assault cases,
36 (mainly farm employees); threats, 32; theft of property, 52 (crops/property/livestock);
barricaded in house 7.
Typical reports
on the situation on farms speak of the new claimants and their supporters
taking the law into their own hands, frequently in direct defiance
of High Court orders, and the police doing nothing - or nothing
effective - about it. Recent examples:
Mr X had just
obtained a High Court order allowing him to continue on his farm,
but his tractor was vandalised and he was punched and smashed in
the face with the butt of a shotgun. A complaint to police elicited
an acknowledgement from an Assistant Commissioner that no-one is
above the law, but nothing was done and no-one was arrested.
"This is
the second consecutive day this week that I have been assaulted,
and at least the eighth time since the 13th May 2009 by mainly the
same people."
"I saw
all my colleagues running for their lives as the situation became
extremely violent. Everyone was being threatened and stone throwing
began again. I was once struck on the back by a stone."
"Yesterday
morning the invaders had been to the house of one of the workers
. . . He is in hiding because of the high levels of intimidation
being employed by the invaders. They told his family that they wanted
to cut his lips off. Last night about midnight they came to the
house of one of the main foremen and started beating him before
abducting him. He is still missing. At time of writing his family
do not know of his whereabouts."
"They
threatened to eat the children".
Irrespective
of the merits of each land dispute and who is the rightful occupier,
any form of violence is in total contravention of human decency
and dignity, against the Constitution and law of Zimbabwe, and against
all international agreements which Zimbabwe has voluntarily entered
into. We should also be looking at the serious humanitarian problems
this violence is causing to thousands of poor farm workers -
loss of livelihood and homes for large numbers of farm employees
and their families, displacement from their homes where they have
lived generations and where their ancestors are buried, loss of
access to schooling and health clinics, etc
SADC
Tribunal's holds Government in contempt of court
Judgment
referred to SADC summit
On 5th June
two Chegutu farmers asked the Tribunal to refer the Government's
failure to comply with the Tribunal's judgment of 28th November
2008 to the SADC Summit. [The judgment had invalidated the seizure
of their farms under the land reform programme and ordered the Government
to protect their continued occupation of the farms.] The Tribunal
granted the application, noting particularly the continued harassment
of the applicants and also the repudiation of the judgment by the
President and the Deputy Chief Justice and the launching fresh of
prosecutions. It ruled that the harassment and failure to protect
the two farmers and the repudiation of the judgement were in contempt
of court. The question of enforcement of the judgment now stands
referred to the SADC Summit, which is the only body with the power
to decide on enforcement measures. The SADC Treaty allows the Summit
to impose sanctions - or suspension from SADC membership -
on a State that fails to abide by a decision of the Tribunal. [Note:
This is the second such referral to the Summit. The Summit has yet
to take any action on the Government's failure to honour the
Tribunal's interim judgment in the same case, which was referred
to the Summit in mid-2008.]
The history
of this case supports a strong argument for our new Constitution
to provide for the immediate domestication of treaties which the
country has entered into. Otherwise a mockery is made of our solemn
treaty obligations.
In another case
before the Tribunal Luke Tembani, a commercial farmer since 1983,
challenged the validity of a provision of the Agricultural Finance
Corporation Act under which, without recourse to the courts, his
farm was sold off at far below its value to pay off a debt owed
to the AFC. The government opposed his application. The tribunal
reserved judgment, but ordered the government to allow Mr Tembani
to stay on his land until its decision is handed down.
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