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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on enforced disappearances in Zimbabwe
Mukoko: What-s the law got to do with it?
Alex T.
Magaisa
May 09, 2009
http://www.thezimbabwestandard.com/opinion/20345-mukoko-whats-the-law-got-to-do-with-it.html
For the last
six months, I have been closely following the matter of Jestina
Mukoko and other activists who spent months in prison before being
released in early March 2009.
Others like
Gandhi Mudzingwa, Chris Dlamini and Anderson Manyere have remained
in custody since December 2008 despite being granted bail by the
High Court.
All detainees
are alleged to have been tortured and subjected to inhumane and
degrading treatment by their captors. All this is happening in a
country that claims to be rehabilitated and in need of assistance
to kick-start a comatose economy.
On Tuesday
May 5, 2009, Zimbabweans and the world at large were shocked to
read that Mukoko and 17 others had been re-detained following proceedings
at the Magistrates- Court in Harare.
The next day,
however, 15 of the 18 detainees were released, the Attorney-General
having finally consented to their bail applications.
Many people
have asked, in the aftermath of this episode, what really is going
on? Some have criticised the magistrate for her ruling to send the
detainees to prison. Many others are plainly confused and disappointed
at the turn of events.
Now, I am not
a criminal lawyer but I like to think I can still read criminal
legislation in the context of our political situation. I am interested
to discover if this really has anything to do with the law.
This, here,
is my attempt to shed light on what happened; why it may well have
been within the law but is nevertheless ridiculous, given the national
interest at stake in the overall scheme of things.
I will attempt
as much as possible to put the language in layperson-s terms,
although this is at the risk of oversimplifying it, something that
might disappoint my colleagues in the law.
I understand
that the basis upon which Magistrate Catherine Chimhanda made her
decision to re-detain Mukoko and others is Section 66 of the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Act [Cap 8:07].
This section
provides for the procedure for bringing an accused person to trial
before the High Court.
This simplified
procedure, commonly known as the "direct indict" procedure
is a departure from an older procedure which required a "preparatory
examination" in the magistrates- Court before indicting
the accused person in the High Court for trial. The types of offences
that are tried by the High Court are called "indictable offences".
The reason
for the preparatory examination was to scrutinise the evidence to
determine whether the accused should be in the High Court. The trouble
with this procedure was that it was time-consuming and costly both
for the state and the accused.
I understand
the law was changed in 1962 to allow for the "direct indict"
procedure as an alternative in straight-forward case, so that a
preparatory examination was not necessary.
Over time, this
simpler procedure became the norm and in 2006, a new amendment produced
the present Section 66, which is now under consideration as the
basis upon which Mukoko and others were sent to prison for the night
of May 5 2009.
Subsection
1 of this provision states that: "If the Attorney-General
is of the opinion that any person is under reasonable suspicion
of having committed an offence for which the person may be tried
in the High Court, the Attorney-General shall cause written notice
to be served on—
(a) a magistrate
for the province within which the person concerned resides or
for the time being is present; or
(b) any magistrate
before whom the trial of the offence could be held in respect
of the offence concerned;
informing
the magistrate of his or her decision to indict the person concerned
for trial before the High Court and of the offence for which the
person is to be tried".
Essentially,
therefore, all the Attorney-General needs to do is to issue a written
notice to the magistrate merely informing her that he has made the
decision to indict, i.e. to formally accuse a person for trial at
the High Court. The AG must of course state the offence.
It is worth
noting here that the AG is not asking the magistrate for permission
to do so. He is not placing evidence before the magistrate —
he is merely "informing" her of his decision and of
the offence. What then does the magistrate do? This requires us
to look at the next provision.
Subsection
2 then states:
"On receipt
of a notice in terms of subsection (1), the magistrate shall cause
the person concerned to be brought before him or her and, notwithstanding
any other provision of this Act, shall forthwith commit the person
for trial before the High Court and grant a warrant to commit him
or her to prison, there to be detained till brought to trial before
the High Court for the offence specified in the warrant or till
admitted to bail or liberated in the course of law."
This means
that once the magistrate has received the notice from the AG, she
is required to call the accused person to be brought before her
court, as happened to Mukoko and others when they came to court
on May 5.
It is important
to note that the provision uses peremptory language, i.e. the magistrate
"shall forthwith" commit the accused person for trial
before the High Court and also grant a warrant to commit the accused
person to prison, where the accused person shall be "detained"
until brought to trial or until "admitted to bail or liberated
in the course of law".
This strong
language shows that, once the notice has been issued by the AG,
the matter is by and large beyond the magistrate-s control
until such time that the accused applies for bail. All that it took
was for the AG to issue the notice to the magistrate, as he did
on May 4, 2009.
Effectively
it is the word of the AG, through that notice to cause the accused
persons to be sent to prison as the magistrate does not seem to
have any discretion on this - under the provision, she has to grant
a warrant for the accused committal to prison.
Under the provisions
quoted above, the magistrate has little, if any, power to question
the nature and quality of evidence that the AG uses to indict the
accused person.
That explains
why Mukoko-s lawyers did not challenge the legality of what
she has done but instead sought to ask for evidence of the political
decisions behind the March bail to be heard.
The irony here
is that it is the political decisions that probably caused the AG
to issue the notice that has led to the re-detention of the activists.
The magistrate-s position would not have changed for the simple
reason that she does not have the power, unless she was considering
a bail application.
For the avoidance
of doubt, it is important to note that the AG could have done what
he did even on the day that Mukoko and others were released in early
March. He could have done it a day later, two days later, indeed
any day after their release.
What then has
changed? Has the State suddenly got enough evidence to give them
reasonable suspicion that the accused committed the alleged offences?
Perhaps. But there could be another motive, which has little to
do with the law.
That the AG
chose to do so on May 4, 2009 has to be considered within the context
of the on-going political negotiations, which have probably hit
a sticky patch.
We must also
consider another relevant aspect. This is not the first time that
the AG has issued a notice of this nature - indeed, as I have said
it is the norm in most cases.
However, my
understanding is that as a matter of practice the norm is for arrangements
for bail to be made where necessary so that in this case, when the
AG issued the notice, he could have stated that he would not oppose
bail.
The lawyers
for Mukoko and others could therefore have applied for bail, which
if she had the power, the magistrate could have dealt with. That
means Mukoko and others would have been spared the ordeal of jail.
So why was consent delayed until a day later?
Did it suddenly
dawn on the AG that it made no sense to lock away accused persons
who were on bail, which bail they had not breached? Or was there
a bigger, invisible hand that caused him to see reason?
There might
be an argument that there is something wrong with the law which
allows the AG to do as he did in this case because it is prone to
abuse.
That may well
be true. The justice system is predicated on the basis that the
officers of the law, the AG included, will uphold the Constitution
and behave in a civilised manner.
It is expected
that the AG will be fair, reasonable and use the powers given to
him in lawful manner, i.e. that there will be no abuse of powers.
That is why
there have been no similar problems as this in the past. But this
system is too dependent on the character of the office holder. Someone
could be vindictive and unreasonable and refuse to consent to bail,
thereby consigning the accused to prison for a lengthy period of
time. The presumptions are misplaced in today-s Zimbabwe.
There was no
reason for Mukoko and others to be sent to prison even for a day.
The AG could
have issued the indictment notice and indicated that he would not
oppose bail. That would have been a reasonable and sensible use
of the powers.
The accused
have not breached their bail conditions (at least there is no allegation
that they have). Given the seriousness of the charges they are facing,
one might have thought they would do a runner, especially having
been unlawfully captured and subjected to inhumane and degrading
treatment during that initial detention. They did no such thing.
Cynics will
be forgiven for holding on to the view that the cases were always
politically-motivated. They have been resurrected in part due to
the challenges of the current negotiations on "outstanding
matters" from the Global
Political Agreement (GPA). As always the law is no more than
a veil to earn legitimacy.
Soon, the justifications
of the rule of law will be heard from those pulling the strings.
The only problem with the law as presently stated is that it is
prone to abuse but a reasonable AG can still conduct him/herself
without causing undue hardship to accused persons.
The Magistrate
did nothing wrong - she had little power to order their release
in the absence of a bail application and the consent of the AG.
If the AG had opposed bail and she agreed with his reasoning then
there would be cause to be more critical of her. In the end the
matter was resolved because the root of the problem, at the AG-s
office solved it by consenting to bail. Why did it not happen on
the first day? The problem is simple.
It is that
those charged with power saw it fit to tighten the vice-grip on
the cojones of Messers Morgan Tsvangirai, Arthur Mutambara, et al.
These poor souls detained were the pawns. It-s crazy. It-s
ridiculous. I had wanted to believe very strongly that there is
something beautiful that can be salvaged from this political hybrid
of a government.
But with each
passing day, even my own optimism, which, I must admit can seem
overly naively eternal, has taken a huge knock. Why do we always
shoot ourselves in the foot? Are we surely incapable of doing the
right thing? And above all, how do they, those who do these things,
how do they sleep at night, if at all?
* Alex Magaisa
is based at, Kent Law School, the University of Kent and can be
contacted at wamagaisa@yahoo.co.uk
or a.t.magaisa@kent.ac.uk
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