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Police
intend to arrest human rights lawyer
MISA-Zimbabwe
November 10, 2008
The Media Institute of
Southern Africa (MISA) Zimbabwe chapter has received reports on
the police's intensions to arrest a human rights lawyer, Harrison
Nkomo, who was representing Phillip Warington Taylor, a British
journalist who skipped bail a week ago.
Taylor was expected in
court on 5 November 2008 failed to turn up after informing Nkomo
through a text message that he had already left the country.
Nkomo later told Harare
Magistrate Catherine Chimanda that Taylor had already left the country
and was in South Africa.
It is reportedly
said that the police want to charge Nkomo with defeating the course
of justice under Section 184 subsection 1 paragraph A of the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform) Act.
The police officers from
the Law and Order section reportedly visited Nkomo's offices
in Harare looking for the lawyer who was reported to be out of town.
Background
Nkomo was representing
Taylor who was arrested on 30 October 2008 by members of the Central
Intelligence Organisation (CIO) at Harare International Airport
on allegations of practicing journalism in Zimbabwe without accreditation.
He was arrested aboard his flight which was about to take off after
he had spent 30 days in Zimbabwe.
Taylor denied practising
journalism while in the country for 30 days and was granted bail
by a Harare magistrate.
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