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High
Court to hear ZINARA case
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
June 08, 2012
High Court Judge
Justice Andrew Mutema will on Tuesday 12 June 2012 hear a case in
which a human rights lawyer wants to stop the police and the Zimbabwe
National Road Administration (ZINARA) from targeting motorists.
Roselyn Hanzi,
a lawyer with Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), took the
matter to the High Court after police fined her for allegedly failing
to produce a "valid" licence disc.
This was after
ZINARA unilaterally and without warning revoked the licensing extension
it had granted to motorists.
ZINARA, which
had extended the deadline to renew the licences to 30 June, startled
motorists when it announced through the press that it had reversed
the decision.
The roads regulatory
authority also instructed police to arrest motorists without "valid"
licence discs.
Hanzi argues
that police were not supposed to penalise her until the last day
of this month. She argues that the decision to "unilaterally
and without warning" revoke the deadline extension was "irrational".
"In any
event, the actions of the 1st Respondent (ZINARA) are afoul of the
provisions of the Constitution
of Zimbabwe, the Administrative Justice Act, as well as the common
law which requires administrative decisions to be reasonable,"
reads part of Hanzi's founding affidavit.
The human rights
lawyer argues that the conduct and actions of ZINARA and Police
Commissioner-General Augustine Chihuri are against Section 3 of
the Administrative Justice Act. The law provides, among other things,
"that an administrative authority which has the responsibility
or power to take any administrative action which may affect the
rights, interests or legitimate expectations of any person shall
act lawfully, reasonably and in a fair manner".
Hanzi wants
the High Court to stop the police from arresting and or fining any
person whose vehicle licence expired on the 31 May. She also wants
ZINARA and the police barred from impounding vehicles whose licences
expired on the 31st of May. Hanzi also asked the court to force
the two organisations to publicise the court order to members of
the public, who of late have been living in fear of police roadblocks
mounted on almost all roads.
Visit the ZLHR
fact
sheet
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