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Supreme
Court readies itself for Maseko's case
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
March 24, 2011
The record
of proceedings in prominent visual artist, Owen Maseko's Constitutional
challenge, is now ready for the Supreme Court after the Bulawayo
Provincial Magistrates Court furnished the Supreme Court with five
copies of the record including two DVD's.
The Clerk of
Court at the Bulawayo Provincial Magistrates Court recently wrote
a letter to the Clerk of Court at the Supreme Court advising that
the record of proceedings had been transcribed and was now complete
and ready for use in Maseko's Constitutional challenge.
The visual artist
was arrested in March 2010 for staging an exhibition in Bulawayo
depicting the 1980's Matabeleland massacres carried out by
troops loyal to President Robert Mugabe's previous government.
Maseko was accused
of undermining the authority of or insulting the President and causing
offence to persons of a particular race or religion.
His exhibition,
which showcased paintings that explored the torture and massacres
that characterised the civil unrest known as Gukurahundi, was forcibly
shut down.
However, his
trial was postponed indefinitely in September 2010 after Bulawayo
Magistrate Ntombizodwa Mazhandu granted an application filed by
Maseko's lawyers Lizwe Jamela, Nosimilo Chanayiwa and Jeremiah
Bamu of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) for the Supreme
Court to determine whether criminalising creative arts infringes
on the freedom of expression and freedom of conscience.
Magistrate Mazhandu
ruled that it was a fact that Gukurahundi - military killings of
over 20 000 civillians in Matabeleland and Midlands-did happen in
the early 80s.
In her ruling
Magistrate Mazhandu referred the application filed by Maseko's
lawyers to the Supreme Court after accepting that the application
was not frivolous and vexatious.
Maseko's
trial is currently on hold until the finalisation of the case in
the Supreme Court.
The Constitutional
Court will now determine whether or not bona fide works of artistic
creativity can be subjected to prosecution under Section 31 and
33 of the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform) Act (Chapter 9:23) without infringing
on the provisions of Sections 18 (1), 19 (1) and 20 (1) of the Constitution
of Zimbabwe.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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