|
Back to Index
13
congregants still in police custody as police violate Mukoyi's
right to health
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
April 11, 2011
13 of the 14
congregants who were arrested
while attending a prayer meeting on Saturday 9 April 2011 in Glen
Norah suburb of Harare were still detained in police custody on
Monday 11 April 2011.
Police only
released one juvenile, who was arrested together with the congregants
when riot police violently stormed and suppressed a church service
organised to pray for peace in the high density suburb.
The 13 congregants,
who include four Pastors have since Saturday 9 April 2011 been detained
in filthy police cells at Glen Norah Police station before being
transferred to Harare Central Police Station on Sunday 10 April
2011. As has become custom, Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights member
lawyers, Marufu Mandevere of Mbidzo, Muchadehama and Makoni Legal
Practitioners and Gift Mtisi of Musendekwa, Mtisi Legal Practitioners,
were denied access to their clients at Glen Norah Police station
despite numerous requests to be able to interview their clients.
One of the detainees
Shakespeare Mukoyi was brutally assaulted by police officers in
the church building in Glen Norah before being taken to the police
station. Since then, Shakespeare has been denied access to full
medication after undergoing an X-ray examination which determined
the need for urgent treatment. Police allegedly took him to Harare
Hospital during the night on Saturday 9 April where he was attended
to briefly before he was unceremoniously seized from the hospital
where the X-ray examination was being undertaken and re-detained
at Harare Central Police Station holding cells despite the fact
that he was in intense pain, with a swollen head, red left eye,
left swollen palm and was finding it very difficult to walk without
assistance.
On Sunday 10
April, when Mukoyi's lawyers were allowed access to interview
him they indicated to the police officers that their client was
in serious pain and could not walk as a result of the injuries he
sustained from the assault by the police. Mukoyi was then once again
taken to Parirenyatwa Hospital where he was again examined. He was
taken back to the police cells after the Doctor indicated that he
was not supposed to be admitted to hospital as the X ray taken did
not show any injuries.
One of the four
Pastors, who is in police custody together with Pastor Mukome, the
Resident Priest at the Nazarene Church, Pastor Isaya was also assaulted
by the police.
The 13 congregants were on Sunday 10 April charged with committing
the crime of 'public violence' as defined in the Criminal
Law Codification and Reform Act and they are yet to appear in
court as police indicated that they are doing further investigations
with the arresting officers since the facts do not disclose that
some of the detainees committed any offence.
Background
The congregants were arrested by anti-riot police on Saturday 9
April 2011 during a church service organised to pray for peace.
The church service had originally been scheduled for St Peters Kubatana
Centre in Highfields, but the venue was changed after police camped
in Highfields overnight and sealed off the venue to block people
from accessing the grounds.
Riot police
stormed the church hall during prayer, and dispersed the congregation,
which included many church, civic and community leaders and assaulted
congregants who were inside and outside the church.
The police went
on to indiscriminately fire tear gas canisters at residences and
churches surrounding the venue of the church service. Even children
who were within and outside the parameters of the church were affected
by the tear smoke and the police clampdown.
The church service was organised by a coalition of churches under
the theme "Saving Zimbabwe . . . .the unfinished journey".
The church service was aimed at presenting an opportunity to pray
for peace in Zimbabwe as part of the process of finishing the journey
to save the country. It was also meant to commemorate the events
of the 11 March 2007
Save Zimbabwe Prayer Meeting, where one activist Gift Tandare
was shot dead while over 100 political and human rights activists
were arrested, tortured and detained through similar heavy-handed
police action.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|