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Recording
the fight for justice in Mugabe's land
Stephanie
Nolen, The Globe & Mail
March 08, 2005
http://www.theglobeandmail.com
HARARE -- The
woman who is arguably Zimbabwe's best lawyer hasn't won an important
case in recent memory. Sure, she wins the divorces and the commercial
cases -- but few of the crucial ones, the battles to protect freedom
of expression and the democratic process in her imploding country.
Even when the rulings go her way, the judgments are ignored and
the victories are empty.
Some might wonder
why Beatrice Mtetwa keeps going back to court.
"People
always ask me why I go to court if I don't believe it is possible
to get justice," Ms. Mtetwa said in her law office in the capital
last week. "But I am one of those who wants to record every
little thing. So I take most cases to court, not because I expect
I will win but so we can learn -- 10 or 20 years from now, we can
look at these records and say, 'You, you were the judge who made
this ruling.' "
Ms. Mtetwa,
46, has been back in Zimbabwe's supreme and constitutional courts
again and again in recent weeks, in the run-up to the parliamentary
election on March 31. She has fought spying charges against three
of the past four international correspondents in the country, who
have fled out of fear for their safety; argued to get popular opposition
parliamentarian Roy Bennett out of jail; appealed to reopen newspapers
closed by the government; and tried to get four million exiled Zimbabweans
the right to vote.
The lawyer has
a brisk and steely manner, at odds with her funky 1970s-style eyeglasses
and the bubble gum she likes to snap, and an unmistakable fearlessness.
Although she has represented the defence in nearly every prominent
human-rights case in Zimbabwe since the country's political crisis
began in the late 1990s, she has remained mostly unscathed. (One
exception: She was badly beaten by a police officer, presumably
because of her human-rights work, in October of 2003, when she was
attempting to get help with a carjacking.)
She won't say
as much herself, but one simple thing appears to protect her: She
is one of the best lawyers in town, and even her most bitter opponents
in the ZANU-PF party come to her for their private legal matters.
She refuses to violate their confidentiality, but it is well-known
in Harare that Ms. Mtetwa handled the police commissioner's divorce,
even while suing him in more than a dozen rights cases.
Ms. Mtetwa,
who was born and raised in Swaziland, moved to Zimbabwe in 1983,
when she married a local math professor.
In the 1980s,
after the country's long struggle for independence, she worked as
a government prosecutor, and so she is well-acquainted with the
circle of ministers around President Robert Mugabe, who have drafted
a series of increasingly repressive laws. The country's new Public
Order and Security Act, for example, outlaws any political meeting
of more than five people. The state broadcaster is not allowed to
accept advertisements from opposition parties.
Despite the
repression, this year's campaign period has been comparatively peaceful,
to the surprise of many international observers. Mr. Mugabe's youth
paramilitary has been deployed around the country but there have
been few of the vicious attacks on opposition supporters that characterized
the 2000 parliamentary election and the 2002 presidential vote.
For the first time, the Movement for Democratic Change was invited
to air its platform on the national broadcaster.
Ms. Mtetwa,
however, finds little comfort in this.
"One shouldn't
say I'm happy with this little window when the whole door should
be open. We must disabuse people of this idea that half the loaf
is better than nothing when you are entitled to the whole loaf,"
she said.
The best voice
for political pluralism in Zimbabwe was the fearless Daily News,
an independent newspaper that was shut down in 2003. Ms. Mtetwa
fought the paper's legal battles; she last appeared in the supreme
court to argue for it a year ago. But the court has refused to release
a judgment "despite the fact of [its] huge importance to Zimbabwe."
This constant battle with an increasingly co-opted judiciary is
taking a toll on Ms. Mtetwa.
"It is
emotionally draining," she said. "It particularly affects
me when I know I cannot help my client in any way, when we have
a heap of court orders and no one is going to enforce them, and
so my client is deported or loses his property. You feel you are
a fake or masquerading as a lawyer."
Yet she has
no intention of stopping.
"It would
be pointless to do this in the first place if you were going to
stop at some stage," she said.
"What I'm
doing is not politics, it's legal. I know African politics and African
leaders and what they say today is not what they do when they come
in to power. . . . The constitution I am seeking to rely on is not
an opposition constitution. It's a constitution passed by this government.
And I'm not fighting for the opposition as it is, but for the rights
as a whole."
This story
is the second of two parts on women making a difference ahead of
the country's March 31 election.
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