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Doing justice to farming
Gugulethu
Moyo
January 26, 2007
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=21&id=9886
BEING a farmer
can be a tough business in today’s Zimbabwe. More so if you do it
part-time.
For one part-time
poultry farmer, the office of a judge’s clerk proved, for a while,
to be a prime location from which to sell fresh chickens. The meat
would be marketed in the clerk’s office while the farmer worked
solemnly in his own office to earn non-farm income from his High
Court job.
The predictable
traffic of court regulars — high-fee earning lawyers in private
practice, government legal advisors, prosecutors, litigants, court
functionaries, judges and sometimes witnesses — were a near-captive
market. It could have been a profitable enterprise.
That was until
lawyers started complaining: they complained to the Judge President
until, finally, she put a stop to the burgeoning trade in chicken
body parts.
The intrepid
part-time farmer in question was a High Court judge; his clerk was
doubling as a salesperson; and the lawyers who complained were concerned
that the sales activity — which sometimes employed fairly aggressive
selling techniques — in the judge’s chambers undermined the proper
administration of justice.
Anecdotes of
this nature pepper day-to-day life in Zimbabwe’s legal community.
One High Court judge, for instance, is said to favour supplementing
his salary by doing a bit of roadside marketing: from the courtyard
in Harare, he’s often seen selling tomatoes and cabbages out of
the boot of his official issue vehicle.
These and other
true stories are traded often among lawyers to illustrate the extent
of the tie-in between the enormous problems besetting the administration
of justice in the country and the ubiquitous involvement by judges
in small-scale farming enterprises.
So when Judge
President Rita Makarau decried last week in a widely publicised
opening-of-the-legal-year
speech the parlous state of Zimbabwe’s judicial institutions,
which she said was caused by government under-spending on the judiciary,
the litany of tales started doing rounds again:
"Well, the government
has already taken steps to improve the pay packages of judges,"
observers said.
"Gono has just
approved the purchase of a fleet of 4x 4 vehicles for judges that
will be given to judges to help them with their farming activities.
"Those judges
who have farms are expected to supplement low salaries with farm
income," the story goes.
And herein lies
one of the central problems of the administration of justice in
Zimbabwe today. When, in 2000, at the start of the Zanu PF government’s
instigated agrarian revolution, members of the judiciary allowed
themselves to be co-opted into a legally murky land redistribution
scheme, the independent viability of Zimbabwe’s judicial institution
was lost.
Judges who stood
their ground, in those days, and ruled that the executive had violated
constitutional protection of property rights and due process were
hounded out of office. Many of those who stayed on the job accepted
government offers of farms whose legal ownership was subject to
litigation in the courts over which they presided. Other judges
were reported to have "invaded" farms and installed themselves in
the place of previous owners.
Few who witnessed
this process can forget the series of nihilistic manoeuvres of that
time. President Robert Mugabe and several ministers, prominent among
them Justice minister Patrick Chinamasa, took it in turns to condemn
judges who ruled against farm acquisitions as "relics of the Rhodesian
era".
One High Court
judge even joined in the attacks, alleging that Supreme Court justices
had pre-decided in their favour all the cases brought by deposed
white commercial farm owners. The judge in question, Godfrey Chidyausiku,
was later appointed Chief Justice in the fast-track judicial reform
process that accompanied the land reform programme.
Rather than
defend their turf in the time-honoured triparte schema which lies
at the heart of most stable democracies — the separation of judicial,
executive and legislative power — many judges took ill-conceived
steps that made them look like willing collaborators in unlawful
executive action. As many judges of the old bench were pressured
to leave office, others jumped in to fill their shoes.
In a radical
philosophical shift, a majority of newly appointed judges in the
"reconstructed" Supreme Court approved the same farm acquisitions
that had been ruled unlawful by their forebears; at the same time
many judges became tenants on the newly appropriated farms.
The tenancy
arrangements were fragile — defaulting tenants could have their
lease withdrawn at any time. Later, this new breed of farmer-judges
applied for and accepted concessionary interest rate loans for new
farmers.
Judges who refused
offers of farms were overlooked in the appointment system and regarded
by the establishment as reactionaries. The result has been that
the value of stock of the judiciary plummeted.
In a now infamous
soundbite, Mugabe warned judges that court decisions that went against
government policy would not be enforced. "After all we pay our judges
very well," he ruled.
Nothing about
the judicial institution has been the same since then. Today, lawyers
who would previously have viewed appointment to judicial office
as the high point of a career in law would not, for one minute,
consider occupying judicial office. And, in recognition of this,
the executive seems to have stopped asking the most distinguished
in the legal profession to serve on the bench.
Now, it seems
that to be appointed to the bench you must be a trusted hand. But
another tragic twist that the judicial deal-makers failed to predict
was that they would become, as appears to be the case now, some
of the least-valued partners in the new political order.
Gone are the
days when judges were paid well. Now they "beg for sustenance" and
their function "is not valued", as Justice Makarau confessed last
week.
Those who took
the farms have to juggle judicial and farming roles to try and make
ends meet from operating agricultural concerns in a hostile economic
climate. Court work is often set aside while judges manage labour-intensive,
undercapitalised farming ventures.
So serious are
the compromises made that lawyers sometimes remark wryly that one
of the hardest legal cases of the day is to figure out whether a
judge is wearing their farmer’s hat or a judge’s wig.
It may, therefore,
not come as a surprise that the Judicial
Service Act, signed into law this week, which in theory introduces
measures to secure the financial autonomy of the judiciary by placing
the power to determine judges’ salaries and perks in the hands of
an independent institution, is greeted with a large degree of cynicism
by many in the legal community.
This law won’t
change much, lawyers say. Having tied up their independence with
so many financial strings, judges are still to solve the hardest
case of all: how to, with credibility, cut the strings attached
to the agrarian revolution within the judiciary.
* Moyo is
a Zimbabwean lawyer who works for the International Bar Association.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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