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Supreme
Court cases waiting - Court Watch 15/2012
Veritas
August 24, 2012
Supreme
Court on Vacation - Cases Pending
The Supreme
Court is on its mid-term vacation which will come to an end on 2nd
September. It is hoped that when it resumes it will be able to clear
the backlog of cases waiting to be heard. This bulletin lists cases
of particular interest that are waiting to go before the Supreme
Court. Only one case has been given a hearing date. The other cases
are still to be given dates.
State
v Mwonzora et al on 4th October
This case is
set down hearing before five judges on Thursday 4th October. It
is the case in which Douglas Mwonzora and twenty-one of his Nyanga
constituents have challenged the constitutionality of their prosecution
on charges of public violence. After an MDC-T rally in Nyanga, Mr
Mwonzora and his co-accused were arrested
and detained in February 2011, on allegations of public violence.
Their release on bail was delayed until 12th March 2011 by the State’s
use of section 121(3) of the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Act and the subsequent unsuccessful State
appeal. At a later remand hearing the magistrate granted a defence
request to refer constitutional issues to the Supreme Court: inhuman
and degrading treatment, violation of constitutional rights to liberty
and protection of the law, and the unconstitutionality of section
121(3) of the CPE Act. [For more details see Court
Watch 3/2011 and Court
Watch 9/2012]
Provincial
Governors Case: President Persists in Attempt to Appeal
Reminder: The
Prime Minister brought a case against the President in the High
Court for unilaterally appointing provincial governors in 2010 in
breach of the Constitution’s provision requiring the Prime
Minister’s agreement to such appointments. The President tried
to block the case with a technical objection that the Prime Minister
should have obtained, but did not, the leave of the High Court before
launching a case against the President. Justice Chiweshe, citing
a previous Supreme Court case, dismissed this argument and on 24th
July refused leave to appeal against his decision.
As expected
[see Court Watch 14/2012
of 28th July] the President, as permitted by law, made a second
application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court. This application,
made on 3rd August, will be decided by a Supreme Court judge. The
Prime Minister has filed papers opposing the granting of leave to
appeal, and a ruling is now awaited.
If leave to
appeal is granted, the President’s technical objection will
go before the Supreme Court for hearing. If that happens and if
the President’s technical objection is then upheld by the
Supreme Court itself, the Prime Minister would have to start all
over again by applying to the High Court for leave to initiate the
case against the President. As the case dates from 2010 and has
taken so long to reach this stage, it would, perhaps, be fruitless
to try starting all over again – the GPA
will have ended before finalisation could be hoped for.
If the Supreme
Court judge refuses leave to appeal, Justice Chiweshe’s decision
dismissing the technical objection stands, and the High Court will
be able to get on with hearing the Prime Minister’s case against
the President. If this happens, there may be some hope the case
will finish before the end of the GPA. A point may then be made,
but it will still be too late to be of much practical relevance.
Mutambara
v Ncube – MDC Leadership Dispute
Two High Court
judges have ruled that Welshman Ncube, not Arthur Mutambara, is
the lawful President of the MDC – Justice Kamocha on 15th
December 2011 and Justice Patel on 12th June 2012. Both judges rejected
the Mutambara camp’s attack on the validity of Professor Ncube's
election at the party’s congress in January 2011. Both decisions
have been temporarily neutralised by the noting of appeals to the
Supreme Court by Professor Mutambara and his supporters. A hearing
is awaited.
Long
Standing Constitutional Cases Awaiting Dates for Hearing
The following
cases, referred to the Supreme Court for judgements on constitutional
challenges arising from cases in lower court, are still awaiting
hearing dates. These cases have been outlined in previous Court
Watch bulletins indicated below [back copies of Court Watches available
from veritas@mango.zw]
Freedom
of expression cases
These are criminal
cases where the accused have questioned the constitutionality of
provisions of the Criminal Law Code – section 31 [spreading
falsehoods]; section 33 [undermining the authority of or insulting
the President] ; and section 96 [criminal defamation]. These provisions
have been frequently invoked to prosecute journalists, civil rights
activists and artistic protest. In one case the police also used
section 42 – causing offence to persons of a particular race,
tribe, colour, creed, etc. In another [the MMPZ
case], the defence lawyer said that section 33 “infringes
the constitutional rights to freedom of expression and protection
of the law, being couched in such wide and vague terms that it has
a chilling effect on freedom of expression because it is not clear
to people what they can and cannot say without courting arrest and
prosecution.” This is true of all the sections cited above.
- The Chronicle
editor and a journalist [Brezhnev Malaba, now former editor, and
Nduduzo Tshuma]. In this case the State prosecuted on a criminal
defamation charge based on a story alleging corrupt conduct by
senior police officers. [Court
Watch 2/2011]
- Owen Maseko
- This case raised the constitutionality of prosecuting Mr Maseko
for his murals depicting the Gukurahundi at the Bulawayo Art Gallery.
The charge was insulting the President. He was also charged for
causing offense to persons of a particular tribe. [Court Watch
2/2011]
- The Standard
editor and journalist [Nevanji Madanhire, editor, and Patience
Nyangove] This was another criminal defamation charge. [Court
Watch 4/2011]
- The Standard
editor and journalist State v Nevanji Madanhire, editor ,and Nqaba
Ntshazi] Criminal defamation again. [Court
Watch 6/2012]
- Media Monitoring
Project staff members [Gilbert Mabuza, Fadzai December and Molly
Chimhanda. The arrests were made during a training workshop –
several charges were brought – an illegal gathering under
POSA; participating in a gathering with intent to promote public
violence or breaches of the peace under Criminal Law Code section
37; but these were dropped, leaving only the charge of undermining
of the President. [Court Watch 6/2012]
- MDC-T MP,
Pishai Muchauraya. A case alleging undermining/insulting the President
by colourful references to his advanced age and state of health.
[Court Watch 6/2012]
- MDC-T MP,
Lynette Karenyi. Another case alleging undermining/insulting the
President. [Court Watch
2/2012]
Cases
Challenging State Blocking Bail
Section 121(3)
of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act enables a prosecutor
to delay the release of an accused person who has been granted bail
by a court, simply by telling the court that the State wishes to
appeal against the grant of bail. Repeated misuse of this power
by prosecutors has been criticised by the High Court, the legal
profession and civil society. [See Court
Watch 8/2012 and Court
Watch 9/2012]. It has also led to MDC-T Chief Whip, Innocent
Gonese MP, tabling in Parliament of a Private Member’s Bill,
currently stalled, to repeal the section.
MDC-T Director
General Toendepi Shonhe This case, raising the constitutionality
of section 121(3) was referred to the Supreme Court in 2009. It
has still not been heard, nether has a date been set. [The same
point has also been raised more recently, in conjunction with separate
constitutional issues, in two other pending cases already mentioned
above: State v Douglas Mwonzora et al [to be heard on 4th October]
and State v Lynette Karenyi. Despite being granted bail by a magistrate,
MP Mwonzora was detained for another 24 days, and MP Karenyi spent
Christmas 2011 behind bars after her arrest for allegedly insulting
the President in a speech at a party rally.
Case
Challenging State’s Unfair Revival of an Old Criminal Charge
MDC-T Deputy
Minister Tongai Matutu challenged the constitutionality of the State’s
2011 revival of a 2005 case against him for insulting the President
in circumstances in which he alleges revival is unjustified. [Court
Watch 6/2012]
Case
claiming compensation for torture: Jaure v Minister of Defence
A former soldier
seeks $1.5 million compensation for alleged unjust imprisonment
and torture during 277 days of confinement in army detention barracks
in 2008-2009. Unusually, the plaintiff has gone direct to the Supreme
Court instead of bringing a claim for damages in the High Court
[Court Watch 6/2012].
More
Recent Constitutional Cases Awaiting Hearing Dates
[not previously
mentioned in Court Watch]
Transmission
of HIV Three cases are pending before the court involving persons
charged with contravening section 79 of the Criminal Law Code. The
section is headed “deliberate transmission of HIV”;
it penalises not only transmission of HIV by someone who knows that
he or he is infected, but also by someone who knows there is a real
risk or possibility that he or she is infected. The defence contention
is that section 79 is unconstitutional and invalid, because it is
too wide, vague and generally worded; discriminates against HIV
positive people in a manner not acceptable in a democratic society;
and criminalises sexual encounters to which the complainants have
consented. These cases have, at defence request, been referred to
the Supreme Court by magistrates in terms of section 24 of the Constitution.
Criminal nuisance
– another WOZA
case On 7th February 2012, members of WOZA were charged with criminal
nuisance contrary to section 46 of the Criminal Law Code, specifically
with “conduct likely materially to interfere with the ordinary
comfort, convenience, peace or quiet of the public or likely to
create a nuisance or obstruction”. The prosecution says that
ten WOZA members, while displaying placards and distributing fliers
in Bulawayo streets, disturbed the free flow of both pedestrian
and vehicle traffic. On 20th June 2012 a Bulawayo magistrate, at
the request of WOZA lawyers, referred to the Supreme Court the question
whether or not their constitutional right to freedom of assembly
had been violated. Their argument was that the Constitution permits
derogation from this constitutional right only in terms of a “law”
meeting certain requirements [Constitution, section 21]. The defence
contends that the Code’s provision cited is so wide, general
and uncertain in scope that it is not a law.
ZBC listener’s
licence fees In the midst of ZBC’s current blitz against unlicensed
listeners, Harare magistrates, at the accuseds’ request, have
referred to the Supreme Court two prosecutions of unlicensed possessors
of TV sets. The question for the court’s decision is whether
constitutional rights are infringed by the Broadcasting Services
Act’s provision compelling everyone who possesses a radio
or television receiver to buy an annual licence from ZBC, whether
or not the receiver is used to receive ZBC broadcasts. The accused
persons allege violation of various constitutional rights: freedom
of expression, freedom of association and protection from discrimination.
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