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Lawyers
seek court remedy to free BBC music presenter
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
May 29, 2012
Human rights
lawyers were on Tuesday 29 May 2012 working on filing an urgent
chamber application in the High Court seeking to compel Zimbabwe's
Immigration authorities to release the passport of British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC) classical music presenter, Petroc Trelawny, which
they are holding onto despite the Attorney General (AG)'s
decision not to pursue his prosecution.
Trelawny was
still holed up in Zimbabwe by late Tuesday after authorities from
the Department of Immigration refused to release his passport, which
they confiscated upon his arrest last week.
On Monday 28
May 2012, the AG's Office declined to authorise the prosecution
of Trelawny, who was arrested last week in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's
second largest city and charged with contravening the country's
immigration laws for allegedly working in the country without a
work permit. This was after the music presenter's lawyers
Munyaradzi Nzarayapenga of Dube-Banda, Nzarayapenga and Partners
Legal Practitioners, who is a member lawyer of Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR) and Nosimilo Chanayiwa of ZLHR convinced
the AG's Office that he had not violated any of the country's
laws.
The turn down
in prosecution by the
State paved the way for Trelawny's release from police and
hospital custody, where he had been under police guard for two nights.
But Nzarayapenga
and Chanayiwa advised that officials from the Department of Immigration
had informed them that they could not release Trelawny's travel
document as they were reportedly consulting their superiors at their
Harare headquarters and the AG's Office, which notwithstanding
has already declined prosecution forcing them to approach the High
Court to compel the Immigration authorities to release their client's
travel document.
Trelawny was
arrested on Thursday 24 May 2012 in Bulawayo and charged with contravening
the country's immigration laws for allegedly working in the
country without a work permit and in contravention of his travel
visa during the week long Bulawayo Music Festival, which ended at
the weekend.
The BBC presenter,
who remains detained at UBH under police guard was expected to have
left Zimbabwe on Tuesday 29 May 2012 on condition that he secures
his passport from Zimbabwean Immigration authorities, who confiscated
the travel document upon his arrest and after completing some procedures
with the Zimbabwe Republic Police and collecting his personal belongings
from Bulawayo Central Police Station, where he was first detained
and where he sustained an injury on his arm while in detention.
Trelawny dislocated and fractured his arm when he accidentally stumbled
in police cells and was admitted at UBH.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
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