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ZCTU National Labour Protest - Sept 13, 2006 - Index of articles
Journalist
and ZCTU leaders released on bail
MISA-Zimbabwe
September 15, 2006
Mike Saburi
a freelance cameraperson arrested together with leaders of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) ahead of planned nationwide
demonstrations were on 15 September 2006 granted bail and remanded
to 3 October 2006 for trial.
Harare magistrate
Olivia Mariga granted Saburi, ZCTU President Lovemore Matombo and
28 other accused persons Zimdollars 20 000 (USd 80) bail each when
they appeared in court on initial remand on charges of contravening
Section 37 (1) (b) Chapter 9: 23 of the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform Act) which deals with conduct likely
to breach public peace.
The court heard how the
police brutally assaulted the ZCTU leaders and the other accused
persons some of whom wore slings and had bandaged arms when they
appeared in court. ZCTU secretary-general Wellington Chibhebhe did
not appear in court with the others as he is admitted at Parirenyatwa
Hospital with multiple head injuries.
The assaults were so
brutal that one of the accused, Lucia Matibenga, the vice president
of the ZCTU, is feared to have shattered her eardrum during the
ordeal.
The defence team led
by Aleck Muchadehama, told the magistrate that some of the accused
had been held at Matapi Police Station whose cells were condemned
as inhuman and degrading by the Supreme Court and made to walk through
raw sewage as they were brutally assaulted one by one by the police
and other unknown persons.
They were also denied
food and blankets during their detention in the unlit bugs-infested
cells. Defence lawyers had to seek an urgent High Court order for
them to get medical attention which the police were continuously
denying them despite representations from their lawyers.
Magistrate Mariga ordered
the police to produce and submit a report on the alleged assaults
after the defence said the perpetrators of the brutal assaults should
be arrested and the Police Commissioner Augustine Chihuri should
give a full report to the court on what transpired at the next remand
hearing.
Section 37 deals with participation in a gathering with the intention
of breaching public peace. The offence carries a fine of Zimdollars
2 000 (USd 8)
Meanwhile, Saburi was
arrested on 13 September 2006 while filming armed riot police as
they descended on the trade union leaders at the meeting point for
the start of the protest marches in Harare's central business
district (CBD).
Background
Armed riot police on 13 September 2006 sealed off Harare's CBD and
arrested Matombo, Chibhebhe, Matibenga, senior opposition MDC official,
Grace Kwinje and Raymond Majongwe, the president of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), among others.
The planned marches which
were slated for 12.30 pm until 2pm on 13 September 2006, had been
called to demand for minimum wages and salaries commensurate with
the Poverty Datum Line (PDL) which was last month pegged at Z$84
million, reduction in income tax to a maximum of 30 percent and
that workers salaries below the PDL should not be taxed.
Heavily armed
police patrolled the CBD and sealed off roads leading to Munhumutapa
Building which houses the Offices of the President and Cabinet and
Parliament Building. The security cordon follows a dire warning
by President Robert Mugabe that the government would ruthlessly
deal with any planned mass actions and demonstrations.
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