|
Back to Index
Trial
of Williams and Mahlangu remanded to 26 February 2009
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
January 28, 2009
The trial of
WOZA leaders, Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu, continued this
morning before Magistrate Msipa following a hearing
last week. Msipa was due to have handed down her ruling on whether
to allow the trial to proceed or not on 27th January but had postponed
her ruling to today, claiming that she had insufficient time to
consult the law library.
Following the defence's
request for charges to be dismissed last week, Msipa denied the
request saying that if the charges had been badly crafted the law
contained 'cures' that could be used as the trial proceeded.
Defence lawyer, Kossam Ncube, then requested a postponement to 26
February to be able to confer with his clients and prepare for trial.
After hearing arguments against a postponement from the state prosecutor,
Lovemore Chifamba, she requested a 15-minute adjournment to write
her ruling.
Msipa returned saying
that she was confused and parroted the exact argument used by Chifamba
earlier that the trial should begin immediately. She hardly allowed
Ncube to respond, interjecting with an emotional insistence that
the trial proceed as the state was ready. She did allow the matter
to be stood down to 11:15 however.
During the adjournment
the defence lodged an appeal to the High Court, the basis of which
being that Magistrate Msipa had refused to grant them time to consider
their options.
After the break, Msipa
was presented with a copy of the application to the High Court.
Once again the state prosecutor weighed in and insisted the Magistrate
ignore the appeal saying that it was unprocedural and should have
been a review, not an appeal. The Magistrate ruled however that
the trial could not proceed until a ruling comes from the High Court.
Williams and Mahlangu
were then remanded to 26th February 2009, and could end up being
remanded until a ruling has been received from the High Court.
WOZA is concerned that
events in court today are a further indication that in Zimbabwe
justice is too often compromised upon the altar of political agendas.
It is also more evidence that the SADC-mediated process is a farce
with ZANU PF making no attempt to make concessions in the interests
of moving forward. Furthermore hours of court and police time were
wasted on a petty matter whilst more serious crimes go ignored or
unheard. Starvation in the prisons is rife and yet no attempt is
made to hear cases that could bring some relief to the dire humanitarian
crisis in the prison system. In just the short time that WOZA was
in court, 15 people were further remanded in custody without any
attempt to hear their cases. It is therefore clear why the opposition
parties insist that the office of Attorney General and ministries
of Home Affairs and Justice be in the hands of impartial professionals.
Visit the WOZA fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|