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Court
sets free women activists as police fail to turn up
Zim-Online
October 14, 2004
http://www.zimonline.co.za/downloads.asp?ID=431
HARARE - Nine women activists arrested for protesting against a
draft law that will restrict non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) were
yesterday cleared of charges of breaching state security laws after
the police failed to turn up in court.
The women, all
of them members of the Women of Zimbabwe Arise pressure group, were
part of a group of about 60 women who marched for 440 kilometres
from Bulawayo to Harare in protest against the proposed law.
Police arrested
and charged the women for violating the state's Public Order and
Security Act which prohibits Zimbabweans from gathering to discuss
politics or from holding political protests without police clearance.
The Attorney-General,
the country's prosecuting officer, refused to put the women on their
defence but the police insisted they wanted the activists tried
in court. The Harare Magistrate's Court however had to free the
women after the police failed to turn up.
A separate group
of women activists, numbering about 50, who were arrested for demonstrating
against the draft NGO law at Parliament, are expected to appear
in court next week, also to answer charges of breaching state security
laws.
Civic society
experts have warned that the new restrictions to be imposed on NGOs
by the new law will see critically needed humanitarian assistance
to Zimbabwe drying up.
The government
says the restrictions are necessary to rein in NGOs it accuses of
working with its enemies to topple it.
* And in another
matter at the courts yesterday, Justice Tedius Karwi issued an interim
order barring Mashonaland Central Governor, Ephraim Masawi, from
harassing and threatening opposition supporters in his province
with death.
The order was
made following an application by opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) party national executive member, Claudious Marimo,
who says he was evicted from his property in the province and threatened
with death by ruling ZANU PF militias.
Marimo told
the court that the militias were acting on orders from Masawi. The
court will make a final determination on the matter after hearing
submissions from Masawi. The governor denies instigating violence
against MDC supporters in his province or threatening Marimo with
death.
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