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Update
on WOZA court appearances
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
July 07, 2009
Magistrate Majonga ruled
today that the police do have a case to answer for the assaults
on the four WOZA members arrested following a peaceful demonstration
on 18th June. All four women were viciously beaten by police officers
upon arrest. She has postponed the case to Monday 13th July so that
the police can prepare a report on the matter. The officers that
assaulted the women are also expected to appear in court on that
day to answer why they carried out the assaults.
Jenni Williams and Magodonga
Mahlangu also appeared on remand today in Bulawayo Magistrate's
Court. The state was keen to proceed to trial immediately, having
received direct orders from the Attorney General's Office that the
two be tried urgently. Prosecutor Chifamba would not accept verbal
assurances from the defence that the matter is still before the
Supreme Court and therefore could not proceed until the written
ruling is received. He was only persuaded when a letter was received
from the Supreme Court outlining that the case before the magistrate
is suspended until the higher court rules on the matter. The two
have been remanded to 17th August to await the Supreme Court ruling.
The written ruling has still not been received despite it having
been set down on 4th June.
News update
- July 06
The four members
arrested in Harare on 18th June appeared in Harare Magistrate's
Court again this morning. Magistrate Majonga had postponed the matter
from Friday 3rd July in order for the state to explain why the four
defendants had been assaulted in police custody and why they had
been denied medical treatment. On arrival at court, the prosecutor,
Public Mpofu, withdrew the charges of disturbing the peace, as the
state could find no witnesses that had had their peace disturbed.
By so doing, the state had hoped to avoid the matter of the assaults
in custody.
Nonetheless, defence
lawyer, Beatrice Mtetwa insisted that the matter of the assaults
be brought before the Magistrate, as had been her order on 3rd July.
Whilst the magistrate indicated that it was highly unusual for her
to be dealing with a matter when charges had been withdrawn, the
defence reminded her that they were two different matters and that
the four women were complainants in a case against the police for
assault. The police were still not prepared to answer why the assaults
had occurred or if the officers responsible were being investigated.
Furthermore, the Officer in Charge of the Law and Order Unit at
Harare Central claimed that he had not received a report of the
assaults from the four women while they were under arrest.
Ms Mtetwa contested this
claim by reminding him that she had personally shown him the women's
injuries and had requested medical treatment for the four women.
When the two medical personnel that she had arranged to attend to
the women arrived, he would not allow them to treat the women, despite
their obvious injuries and severe pain, and ordered a female police
officer to process the women to be taken to Parirenyatwa Hospital
instead. It was after the four forms had been completed that the
Officer Commanding refused to allow the women to be taken to hospital
as punishment for 'embarrassing the state during Irene Khan's (the
Secretary-General of Amnesty International) visit.' Ms Mtetwa offered
to produce the two medical personnel and the four defendants as
witnesses to corroborate this version of events.
The matter has been postponed
until Tuesday 7th July for the magistrate to rule on whether the
police need to answer on why the women were assaulted and why they
were denied medical treatment.
In a separate matter,
the state has indicated that it is ready to proceed with the trial
against Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu tomorrow, 7th July,
on charges of disturbing the peace despite the fact that the Supreme
Court has yet to give its written judgement on the matter. When
the two last appeared in Bulawayo Magistrate's Court on 30th April,
the state agreed to a long remand in order to give time for the
Supreme Court to rule and indicated that if a decision had not been
received by this time, Williams and Mahlangu would be removed off
remand pending the decision. Nonetheless, prosecutor Chifamba told
defence lawyer, Kossam Ncube today that he had been directed to
proceed with the trial when the two appear on remand tomorrow.
The full panel
of Supreme Court judges had met to consider the case on 4th June
and had given a verbal ruling before they reserved judgement that
the two women had been unlawfully arrested and that they should
be looking to indict the arresting officers. The state had conceded
in their response that the arrest on 16th October 2008 had indeed
been unlawful. Judge Chidyausiku undertook to provide the written
ruling before 7th July. Despite the fact that defence advocate Mpofu
has formally written to the Supreme Court requesting the ruling,
the written ruling has not yet been received.
News update
- July 03
The seven members arrested
in Bulawayo on Wednesday 17th June appeared on remand in Bulawayo
Magistrate's Court this morning. The state was not prepared with
either the docket or state witnesses. They have been further remanded
out of custody until 22nd July.
In Harare, the four members
who had been arrested on 18th June and badly beaten appeared in
Harare Magistrate's Court yesterday morning. As in Bulawayo, the
state was not ready with either the docket or state witnesses. Neither
were the police ready to answer why the four were so badly beaten
in custody. The magistrate has postponed the matter to Monday 6th
July and has insisted that the state be ready on that date.
Subsequently all four
members have been called into Harare Central Police Station by officers
from the Law and Order Unit to give their account of what happened
to them in custody.
Both groups
of activists, in Harare and Bulawayo, are charged under Section
37 1 a of the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform) Act - 'disturbing the peace, security
or order of the public'.
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sheet
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