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Publisher's
passport released
MISA-Zimbabwe
December 14, 2005
The government
has released the passport which it seized from Trevor Ncube the
chairman of Zimind Publishers after the Attorney-General’s Office
declined to file an opposing affidavit against an application for
its immediate release.
Sternford Moyo,
Ncube’s lawyer, told MISA-Zimbabwe on 14 December 2005 that the
passport had been handed to him after the AG’s Office described
the seizure as unlawful.
Moyo said the
AG’s office had indicated that it would not be filing an opposing
affidavit following his urgent application for a High Court Order
compelling the government to immediately return the passport.
"I can
confirm that I am currently in possession of Trevor’s passport after
the Attorney-General’s Office indicated that it would not be opposing
the application because the seizure was an unlawful act," said
Moyo.
Ncube filed
the urgent application on 12 December 2005 arguing that the decision
infringed on his basic freedoms and rights.
In his application,
Moyo argued that the seizure of his client’s passport was an unlawful
act, as Ncube had not been afforded the opportunity to submit representations
on the matter.
The controversial
Constitutional Amendment (No 17) Act empowers the government to
seize the passports of citizens suspected of undermining "national
interests" during their travels abroad.
The Chief Immigration
Officer Elasto Mugwadi, Registrar General Tobaiwa Mudede, and the
Minister of Home Affairs Kembo Mohadi, were cited as the respondents
in the matter.
It was argued
that such "grossly unreasonable administrative decisions"
were frowned upon by the law and should be set aside.
The seizure
of the passport also violated the fundamental principles of natural
justice as no rational reasons were given for the decision nor was
Ncube given the chance to be heard.
The decision,
therefore violated Ncube’s right to freedom of movement, freedom
of expression and freedom of thought, as he had been condemned without
being heard, said Moyo in his application.
Immigration
officials seized Ncube’s passport on 8 December 2005 upon his arrival
in Bulawayo from South Africa where he is also the publisher of
the Mail and Guardian.
The immigration
official who confiscated Ncube’s passport informed him that he was
one of the people on a list of 64 persons whose passports should
be impounded.
According to
media reports, exiled Zimbabwean media practitioners Basildon Peta,
Nqobile Nyathi, Caroline Gombakomba and Geoffrey Nyarota, appear
on the list of those whose passports should be impounded.
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fact sheet
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