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Letter
to the Law Society of Zimbabwe
Ben Freeth
February 18, 2010
Dear Sir
Re:
Mr. Mlotshwa-s request for a public statement by the Law Society:
Mr. Mlotshwa
wrote to yourselves on the 1 February alleging that I was in contempt
of Justice Patel-s
judgment and asking you to: "issue a public statement
condemning the unwarranted attack on the Independence of the Judiciary
and in particular on the integrity of the Honourable Mr. Justice
Patel."
Mr. Mlotshwa
credits the Saw Society for having "always issued statements
based on matters of principal, in particular the preservation of
the rule of law as well as the independence and integrity of the
profession."
Mr. Mlotshwa
has taken particular offence to the final paragraph in the SADC
Tribunal Rights Watch statement that says "the Judge,
in his attempt to legalise a program of ethnic cleansing has joined
the ranks of other judges under dictatorial regimes such as NAZI
Germany or Stalinist Soviet Union and left Zimbabweans more exposed
than ever to further abuse by the Zimbabwean Government."
From this statement
Mr. Mlotshwa fallaciously believes that I have "effectively
labelled Justice Patel a "NAZI judge." I did not say
that. I have said that he is a judge serving under a dictatorial
regime (having left its Cabinet as the President-s acting
Law Officer to rejoin the Bench); that he has sought to legalise
what the Tribunal held (just like ethnic cleansing) to be in conflict
with international law; and that the effect of his ruling is to
leave Zimbabweans yet more exposed to the human rights abuses clearly
found by the Tribunal. No part of that is untrue.
Mr. Mlotshwa
is clearly not a friend of justice in the SADC Tribunal. On one
occasion, in the presence of other legal practitioners for the Applicants,
he most unprofessionally stormed out of chambers of the Judges in
the SADC Tribunal building when things weren-t going his way
(they had just ruled against him); and having himself taken over
Rydings school in the name of "land reform," he is not
keen that the SADC
Tribunal Judgment should be upheld. He has been the subject
of complaints to the Law Society in the past himself.
It is my belief
it is important that the Law Society indeed does make a statement
concerning the Patel judgment. The issues at stake in Justice Patel-s
judgment regarding the registration of the SADC Tribunal judgment
relate to:
1. Whether the
rule of law should be allowed to be revived in Zimbabwe after amendment
17 denied the right even for a hearing in any court regarding
the acquisition of somebody-s property.
2. Whether racial and other discrimination issues should be allowed
to persist in the land reform program.
3. Whether the
Zimbabwe Government should pay compensation to those that have had
their homes and businesses taken from them.
Justice Patel
says that the land reform program is "public policy"
and justifies his non-registration of the SADC tribunal judgment
on the premise that he has to support "public policy"
because public policy is for the "public good."
It is important
that it is pointed out here that there were various anomalies relating
to the hearing:
1. Advocates
Gauntlett SC and Pelser were inexplicably denied registration to
argue the case both by the Minister of Justice and then by Justice
Patel. As far as I know there is no precedent for this in the history
of Zimbabwe. Not only had Mr Gauntlett - a former chairman of the
SA Bar and a Judge of Appeal in another SADC country - frequently
been admitted by Judge Patel-s colleagues before, but on the
very same day - 18 November 2009 -as the Minister refused his assent
to Mr Gauntlett on the grounds that South Africa is not a "reciprocating
country" with Zimbabwe, he granted it (Judge Patel was told)
to another South African senior counsel (not of course appearing
against the Government). Judge Patel did not so much as address
this in his ruling. For what reason would two upstanding and highly
qualified African advocates be denied access to argue a simple case
of registering an International Judgment? The denial of access by
Zimbabweans to external legal assistance - a long tradition
before and after Stella Madzimbamuto-s challenge to the Smith
regime - is a serious matter; I ask the Law Society to investigate
it urgently.
2.The argument
that Justice Patel uses to block the registration regarding the
SADC Tribunal Judgment running counter to "public policy"
and the "public good" was never advanced in the court
hearing by the Zimbabwe government representatives or anyone else.
If it had been, the effects regarding the suffering that the chaotic
land reform program had produced in displacing perhaps a million
people, bringing the country into a desperate food-insecure position,
the horrific unemployment, the downstream collapse of the economy
and the social infrastructure relating to health and education and
all the other effects, would have been brought out to show that
it has not in fact been for the "public good." How indeed,
can fundamental rule of law ousters; blatant discrimination; and
the taking of private property without any compensation, be something
that a judge can support on the facile argument that it is simply
"public policy" to do these things?
If the Law Society is to help protect human rights and safeguard
"the preservation of the rule of law" in Zimbabwe I
believe it is incumbent on it to express its serious concern about
the Patel Judgment refusing the registration of the SADC Tribunal
awards, vigorously and widely.
3. Mr Mlotshwa
is astute not to disclose to the Law Society his own interest. It
is pertinent to point out here that Mr. Mlotshwa is well aware of
the flagrant human rights abuses and rule of law break down on the
commercial farms in Zimbabwe.
One of his clients,
Minister Nathan Shamuyarira, took over our farm, Mount Carmel, against
Zimbabwe High Court orders and the SADC Tribunal orders. In the
last year his thugs have beaten our workers very severely, some
sustaining broken bones, and they have been stopped from working
since April 2009. We have been evicted by his men with guns; our
houses with all our possessions have been burnt down along with
some of our workers houses with all their possessions; our tractors
and other farm equipment has all been stolen; all our crops have
been stolen before our eyes to the extent that we could not reap
one cob of maize or one mango or orange or sunflower head; the hay
bales were burnt; the 40,000 fruit trees on the farm have not been
irrigated, sprayed, pruned or fertilised.
A visit to the
farm today will show this once very productive farm to be in dereliction
with no crops having been planted.
Not one of the
perpetrators of these crimes has been arrested by police despite
numerous reports to them. Indeed it is common knowledge that Gilbert
Moyo and the other perpetrators of our abduction, severe beating
and attempted murder in 2008 that Mr. Mlotshwa refers too, are now
walking free. They have never been brought to trial.
The Law Society
will know that this kind of breakdown in the rule of law remains
widespread in Zimbabwe. High Court orders are not being upheld by
the police in situation after situation on the commercial farms
and tens of thousands of people in the farmer and farm worker community
have lost their livelihoods and in many cases their homes and other
possessions in recent months.
If we care about
our people and our country, we have a clear public duty to help
prevent the people within the judicial system from sliding into
the totalitarian logic that appears to be prevalent within Zimbabwe
and which is the same kind of logic that drove Andrey Vyshinsky,
Stalin-s show trial prosecutor general, to write in his textbook,
Judicial Organisation in the USSR in 1939:
"The laws
of the Soviet power are a political directive and the work of the
Judge amounts not just to the application of the law in conformity
with the needs of bourgeois judicial logic, but to the application
of the law as a political expression of the Party and the Government . . . .the
judge must be a political worker, rapidly and precisely applying
the directives of the Party and the Government."
The strong voice
of the Law Society in defence of human rights and the rule of law
in Zimbabwe is greatly needed. If Zimbabwe-s police force
is going to allow this kind of rule of law break down we need defenders
of the rule of law to come out powerfully against this very destructive
"public policy" that Justice Patel appears to support.
Lastly, I would
suggest that the Law Society would be concerned to upheld freedom
of a speech as a constitutionally-protected right, and that it would
hold (on what I understand is strong legal precedent) that this
specifically includes the right to criticise judgments. If Judge
Patel believes I have violated his rights, he has civil and criminal
law remedies. Mr Mlotshwa has no entitlement (unless this interest,
too, is not disclosed) to speak for him.
Yours sincerely
Ben Freeth.
Email: freeth@bsatt.com
cc
Southern African Development Community Lawyers- Association
West African Bar Association.
Pan African Lawyers- Union
Coalition for an Effective African Court on People-s and Human
Rights
International Commission of Jurists.
Amnesty International
Human Rights Forum
Gerald Mlotshwa
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