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Urgent
application brought to halt offloading and transport of arms bound
for Zimbabwe
The
Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC)
April 18, 2008
Durban -- An urgent application
is being brought in South Africa's High Court to suspend the
grant of a conveyance permit allowing the transport of arms, currently
on board the An Yue Jiang anchored in Durban's port, to the
government of Zimbabwe and to prohibit the offloading of the consignment
and any transport of it through or over the Republic of South Africa.
This interim relief is
sought pending an application for a court order declaring the decision
to grant the conveyance permit to be unlawful and invalid and reviewing
and setting aside the decision of the Secretary of Defence who is
purported to have granted the conveyance permit.
The application is being
brought on behalf of individuals, Bishop Rubin Phillip and Gerald
Patrick Kearney, acting in the public interest, with the support
of the Southern Africa Litigation Centre. Attorney JP Purshotam
and Advocates Malcolm Wallis SC, Angus Stewart and Max du Plessis
are acting in the matter.
The legal action will
be brought in terms of the National Conventional Arms Control Act
(the Act) which requires that any transfer of arms be authorised
by a permit issued in terms of the Act. Specifically, the grant
of a permit is limited under provisions of the Act which require
that such transfer not contribute "to internal repression
or suppression of human rights and fundamental freedom" and
not provide "arms to governments that systematically violate
or suppress human rights and fundamental freedoms."
Nicole Fritz,
director of the Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC) said: "given
the current situation in Zimbabwe, with increasing accounts of widespread
attacks on Zimbabwe's civilian population by government forces,
it is hard to imagine clearer circumstances in which South African
authorities were obliged to refuse the grant of any conveyance permit."
*Contact: Nicole
Fritz (Director) - Email: nicolef@osiafrica.org
- Phone: 011 403 3414/ 082 452 3909
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