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Arrest
and detention of four student leaders
Amnesty
International
August 06, 2009
Amnesty International
today condemned yesterday's arrest and detention of four student
leaders. They were arrested while addressing students at the University
of Zimbabwe in Harare.
The leaders
of the Zimbabwe
National Students' Union (ZINASU) were addressing students
outside the main library of the University of Zimbabwe when they
and ten other students were rounded up and subsequently detained
by police at Avondale police station. Though the ten were later
released, ZINASU President Clever Bere, Kudakwashe Chakabva from
the Harare Polytechnic, Archieford Mudzengi from the Zimbabwe School
of Mines, and Brian Rugondo spent the night in custody.
This morning, the four
student leaders were taken to the Law and Order section of Harare
Central Police station where they remain. Currently, neither the
detainees nor their lawyers have been advised of what the charges
are against them.
"We are dismayed
at the continued harassment and intimidation by police of activists
and human rights defenders, despite the inauguration of an inclusive
government in February this year. These students were arrested and
detained purely as a result of attempting to exercise their right
to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly,"
said Erwin van der Borght, Director of Amnesty International's
Africa Programme.
"The student leaders
should be released immediately and unconditionally. Their unlawful
arrest demonstrates yet again the need to urgently reform the security
sector in Zimbabwe in light of the numerous human rights violations
that continue to be committed."
In their address to students
at the University of Zimbabwe, the student leaders had spoken out
against the way in which the university authorities have been preventing
students who have not paid their fees from attending lectures and
accessing the libraries.
Reports indicate that
as many as three-quarters of all the students have not been able
to pay their fees this semester, which range between USD 400 and
USD 600 per semester. Lectures were due to start on 4 August.
Pending the release of
the student leaders, Amnesty International urges the Zimbabwe Republic
Police to ensure that they are treated in compliance with human
rights standards governing the treatment of detainees. They should
have access to their lawyers, their families, warm clothing and
blankets, adequate food and any medical attention they may require.
Background
The Law and
Order Section of the Zimbabwe Republic Police is responsible for
many of the human rights violations committed by police officers
against human rights defenders and political activists.
Amnesty International
has documented numerous violations by the unit, including arbitrary
arrest, unlawful detention, torture and other ill-treatment, and
denial of detainees' access to lawyers, food and medical care
while in police custody.
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