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Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Zim
diamond researcher slapped with fresh charges
Alex Bell, SW Radio Africa
July 28, 2010
http://www.swradioafrica.com/News280710/diamonds280710.htm
Diamond researcher and
human rights activist Farai Maguwu has been slapped with fresh charges,
just over two weeks after his release on bail from Harare Remand
Prison.
Mutare police on Tuesday
re-arrested Maguwu and charged him with possessing a stolen vehicle,
an old Mercedes Benz that he was apparently using before his original
arrest in June. Police indicated that Maguwu could also face alternative
charges of failing to register the same car, if they can't
prove it was stolen. The rights activist was released the same day
into the custody of his lawyer, Tinoziva Bere, after making a statement
and being charged.
Bere told SW Radio Africa
on Wednesday that the charges are a way of persecuting his client,
explaining that the police have no evidence to suggest that car
is stolen. Bere said that at one point it wasn't clear if
the police would actually release Maguwu, who was interrogated for
several hours. Bere expressed anger that he, as Maguwu's lawyer,
was barred from the interrogation process, which he explained was
"in direct contravention of the constitution and international
statutes of the law."
"Farai knows the
kind of malice being directed at him and he saw the humorous side
of these efforts to keep persecuting him," Bere said, adding:
"He is concerned though, that they won't let matters
with him rest."
Maguwu still faces charges
of communicating so-called 'falsehoods' deemed prejudicial
to the state, in connection with the work he has done exposing the
level of human rights abuses at the Chiadzwa diamond fields. He
was released on bail earlier this month, more than five weeks after
his original arrest. He is now living under strict bail conditions
that include daily visits to the Mutare police station and a restriction
on his travel to within 40km of his Mutare home.
Bere said he is not hopeful
that the case will be heard in court any time soon, and said Maguwu
is prepared for the likelihood of ongoing persecution in the way
of more unexpected charges being laid against him.
"Farai understands
that there will be no mercy from these people. He has offended them
completely by his demands for transparency in the handling of the
Chiadzwa situation," Bere said.
There have been widespread
calls for the charges against Maguwu to be dropped, with campaign
groups arguing his arrest was to deliberately silence him amid Zimbabwe's
bid to sell the controversial Chiadzwa diamonds. His arrest in June
coincided with a meeting of the international diamond trade watchdog,
the Kimberley Process, where debate over whether to certify the
diamonds for sale was high on the agenda.
Maguwu was meant to speak
at that meeting but instead found himself facing maltreatment in
police custody. He told SW Radio Africa after his eventual release
that all his blankets were confiscated by the police, who left him
to sleep on cold floors in the dead on Zimbabwe's winter time.
As a result, he developed a serious throat infection and was denied
medical treatment for several days. His condition worsened and he
eventually had to undergo surgery on his throat.
His release meanwhile
is widely believed to have been as a result of a trade-off between
the government and the international diamond authorities who earlier
this month met to decide Zimbabwe's trade future. An agreement
between the Mines Ministry and the Kimberley Process, which will
see the export of Chiadzwa stones take place under monitoring conditions,
was only reached after Maguwu was released on bail.
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