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WOZA
deliver petition to Minister of Education - beatings and arrests
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
February 25, 2009
Hundreds
of members of Women and Men of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA/MOZA) delivered
a petition to the new Minister of Education, Senator David Coltart
today in Harare. Whilst leaders tried to deliver the petition to
the minister, with whom they had an official appointment, riot police
indiscriminately beat the peaceful group that were waiting for the
minister to come and address them. At least 10 members have been
arrested. The full extent of the injuries sustained are not clear
but at least one woman is unable to walk and an ambulance has been
called for her.
The group of
450 members handing in the petition converged on the Ministry of
Education from three different directions. The first group to arrive
was immediately set upon by the riot police detail that is based
at Parliament. Whilst they were being beaten however, the women
appealed to the police reminding them that their children are not
going to school either. The police stopped the beatings and the
protestors re-grouped outside the Ministry to wait. A police vehicle
full of riot police arrived shortly afterwards however and again
started to beat the group. They were joined by a second vehicle,
again full of riot police who were banging their shields and singing,
"today we are going to beat you" as they descended on
the group and viciously began to beat them. They later changed their
song to "why are your husbands' allowing you to demonstrate?".
As they were
driven off towards Harare Central Police Station, the women under
arrest were heard to be singing "we want education for our
children." More details of their arrest will be given once
lawyers had been able to attend to them.
The Minister,
who had been delayed by an urgent meeting with the Prime Minister,
finally arrived to accept the petition of approximately 25,000 signatures.
He expressed regret and sorrow that the group who had had an official
appointment with him should be beaten and arrested and said that
these kinds of incidents were exactly what the MDC was trying to
change by joining government. He also stated that he had heard the
pleas of Zimbabwean parents and would do everything in his power
to ensure that every child goes to school.
The petition
and the protest are part of WOZA's Take the Step campaign, designed
to encourage Zimbabweans to continue with the civic participation
that they demonstrated in March 2008. The signatures on the petition
were collected by WOZA members in a door-to-door campaign in recent
weeks. The petition text reads as follows: 'Please put our children's
education first. I am a parent whose child did not learn well in
2008. There were no teachers, no textbooks, and I cannot pay the
new forex fees. Please declare the education system a national disaster
and allow all children to repeat 2008 at no cost. Those that do
not want to repeat will need help so that the children do not suffer.
Please campaign to lure teachers home with dignified salaries, adequate
supplies, furniture and equipment in schools.'
More information
will be made available as it is received.
News
update
25th February 2009 - 6pm
5 WOZA members
detained in Harare Central - 9 treated for injuries
Five members,
four women and one man, will spend the night in Harare Central Police
Station tonight following their arrest this morning whilst trying
to hand in a petition to the Minister of Education. Lawyers from
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights have not been allowed access to
their clients so the details of what they will be charged with are
not known. Food has been allowed in to the group this evening.
Nine members
have had to receive treatment for the vicious beatings they received
from riot police. All have been discharged however. Most injuries
were deep tissue bruising from being beaten with baton sticks -
deep welts can be seen on most of those that received treatment.
One woman has a fractured toe from where she was stamped on by a
booted police officer. The woman for whom the ambulance was called
has a serious injury to her knee. She had been trying to protect
her seven-month old baby from being beaten and was begging police
not to hurt her or her baby. This obviously angered the police who
then proceeded to single her out for a more severe beating. She
is unable to walk and had to be carried home. Many others received
beatings but as police were circling the Ministry continuously,
they obviously were not able to make contact with the support team
to receive treatment.
More information
will be made available tomorrow morning.
News
update
26th February - 4pm
5 WOZA members
remain in custody in Harare - trial of Williams and Mahlangu
postponed to 5 March
The four women
and one man arrested in Harare yesterday remain in custody at Harare
Central Police Station. The docket has been handed over to the Law
and Order department. Although the boss has confirmed receiving
the docket, he has not yet assigned an investigating officer. Human
rights lawyer, Alec Muchedahama attended this morning and was asked
to return at 2pm. At 2pm, no one was able to attend to him. At this
time there is no progress on what charges are being proffered and
no sign of them being processed to appear in court. The
48 hours allowed by law will expire on Friday at 10:30 am.
Muchedahama
briefly saw his clients and they advised him that riot police assaulted
them all when they were arrested at the Ministry of Education offices.
Members present at the protest also confirm hearing the riot police
singing another song, 'tinoda hondo' (we want war).
In the meantime,
WOZA leaders, Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu appeared in
Bulawayo Magistrate's Court today. They face charges under
the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform) Act with disturbing the peace
for a 16 October 2008 arrest and under the Miscellaneous Offences
Act (which was replaced in 2006) with breaching the peace for a
2004 case. There were remanded out of custody to 5th March 2009.
Defence lawyer,
Kossam Ncube, also took the opportunity to file an appeal against
the Magistrate's ruling from the 28th January in which she
refused to quash the charges against Williams and Mahlangu.
State witnesses,
including a high-ranking superintendent, were present and were asked
to return on 5th March; the Magistrate taking time to apologise
to them for any inconvenience caused.
When the pair
appeared on 28 January 2009, the Magistrate had refused to quash
charges despite a factual argument from the defence. She has insisted
the trial proceed there and then. The defence had asked for time
to prepare, and was promptly denied. With no alternative, the defence
lawyer had appealed to the High Court to overrule the Magistrate's
refusal to allow time to prepare for trial. The Magistrate, on receiving
a copy of the appeal, had ruled that the case could not proceed
until the High Court ruled on the matter. At the time of the hearing
today, no decision had been received by the High Court so it should
have been a simple matter of remanding the matter to another date
pending a ruling.
It was therefore
a total disregard for due process to hear the prosecutor, Lovemore
Chifamba state that the trial would begin today. Expressing dismay
at the prosecutor's actions, the defence lawyer argued that
the Magistrate could not proceed to trial as she would be in effect
overruling herself and sitting in appeal of her own ruling of 28
January 2009. Faced with standing by her ruling and remanding the
activists to a date months away, she decided to adjourn the court
for two hours. Upon her return the state had put a second prosecutor,
Mr Moyo at the bar. The Magistrate then mumbled that in light of
the submissions, she would postpone the matter by one week.
During the adjournment,
the defence lawyer was summoned to see the Attorney General's
representative, Mrs Cheda, who attempted to put pressure on the
lawyer to participate in 'fast tracking' the appeal
to the High Court so that the trial could go ahead. The fact that
this was presupposing any ruling would go the way of the state was
lost on them in their haste to take Williams and Mahlangu to trial.
The lawyer declined to be put under pressure.
The farce parading
as 'justice' continues on 5th March 2009 and could result
in the High Court being forced to fast track this case over other
backlogged cases and the trial being forced through. WOZA has a
case from 2004 still waiting for a ruling in the High Court.
It should not
be overlooked that Williams and Mahlangu were peacefully demanding
that the food emergency be declared a national disaster and the
Attorney General's Office's enthusiasm for fast-tracking
trials would be more appropriate for those cases which have been
pending for years and in which the accused persons are in custody,
as the state has no money to feed them.
News
update
2nd March - 4pm
5 WOZA activists released
on US $50 bail after 6 days in custody
The four women and one
man arrested in Harare on Wednesday finally appeared in Harare Magistrate's
Court this morning on charges under Section 37 (1) (a) (i) of the
Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act - "disturbing
the peace, security or order of the public". They were released
on bail of US $50 each by Magistrate Olivia Mariga and remanded
out of custody to 19th March. They also have to report to their
nearest police station every Friday. The state prosecutor also tried
to insist on an early trial but the docket was not ready. They were
brought to court by law and order officer, Phiri.
The investigating officer
Detective Sergeant Kahora is the man responsible for ensuring that
the group were unlawfully detained, spending six days in custody,
well over the 48-hours allowed for by law.
WOZA would like to salute
the courage and determination of these parents in enduring beatings,
arrest and detention in horrific conditions to ensure that their
concerns about their children's education were brought to
the attention of the Minister of Education. The extended and unlawful
detention, the extortionate bail demanded and the reporting conditions
imposed also show that the inception of an unity government has
done nothing to change the way democracy and social justice activists
are treated by a hostile and repressive state.
Visit the WOZA fact
sheet
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