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Outcry
over women’s arrests
Phyllis
Mbanje, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
July 14, 2013
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2013/07/14/outcry-over-womens-arrests/
There has been
a public outcry following the police clampdown on female patrons
in various nightspots in Harare in the past two weeks, under an
operation dubbed Zvanyanya (It’s too much).
Police rounded
up about 53 women they encountered in bars, nightclubs, in the city
centre and Avenues area and force-marched them to Harare Central
Police Station.
Those caught
in the dragnet included dancers, sex workers and even those who
had simply accompanied their male counterparts for drinks.
They were charged
with soliciting in public places.
The police also
pulled out women booked at city lodges despite protests from one
of the managers who showed the officers an operating licence.
Musasa
Project director, Netty Musanhu on Thursday said it was infuriating
that after all the noise about a new Constitution with all the provisions
specific to women, police go on “to make a mockery of the
whole issue”.
“So are
we supposed to then go and vote freely when police can just arrest
us willy nilly? Women fought alongside men during the liberation
struggle so it really does not make sense that only women are being
arrested,” she said. “What they are telling us is that
it is not safe for women to go out. Women then are not free and
should go back to the bush and fight another liberation war.”
Musanhu also
said it was unfair that women were now being discriminated against
in terms of how and where they socialised.
Commenting on
the charge of soliciting in public places, she said it took two
people to commit the “crime”.
“This
is a demand and supply scenario. As long as there is demand out
there, the problem will not go away,” said Musanhu. “This
kind of behaviour will force us to do the naming and shaming because
we hear there are some police officers who demand free sex from
the sex workers.”
The on-going
operation has resulted in women shunning the nightspots for fear
of being arrested and this has caused a slump in business over the
past few days.
On Wednesday
and Thursday last week, most clubs in town were deserted as both
men and fear-stricken women stayed away.
The few patrons
that turned up and nightclub operators who spoke to Standardcommunity
criticised the police for targeting innocent women.
“Is it
a crime for females to go to a pub, is it a crime?” said one
distraught night club owner who preferred anonymity for fear of
victimisation by the police.
“I do
not think the police actions are lawful. How can you assume that
any woman who enters a club is there to solicit for customers? It
is only those with a warped mind who think like that,” he
added.
The Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), who are representing some of
the women, said the arrested women were placed on initial remand
after a number of them failed to raise the US$100 fine or the US$200
bail.
They were charged
under Section 81(2) of the Criminal
Law (Codification and Reform) Act, which criminalises solicitation
in a public place.
Thirty-seven
of the arrested women pleaded guilty but could not raise the fine
and the remaining 16 pleaded not guilty and were granted US$200
bail.
ZLHR has accused
the police of assaulting some of the women who had been placed on
initial remand.
They were reportedly
beaten with batons and were subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment.
“They
were even denied sanitary wear while they were in custody,”
read part of the statement from the ZLHR.
‘Police
conduct grossly unfair’
Deputy Minister
for Women’s Affairs, Gender and Community Development and
MDC candidate for Harare West, Jessie Majome said arresting women
in bars was “barbaric, draconian and grossly unfair”.
“This
is so primitive and downright unconstitutional. Police acted outside
the mandate of the Constitution by infringing on the right to freedom
and movement for these women.”
Majome said
it was ironic that a new Constitution dictated equal rights for
men and women but on the ground it was a different story.
“As women,
we have been robbed of that opportunity to freely exercise our rights.
This is not the way to address social ills. There has got to be
a better way which does not discriminate against women,” she
said, adding that it was shameful that female police officers were
part of the operation.
The operation
is a sequel to another infamous “Chipo Chiroorwa,” which
also targeted female patrons a few months back.
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