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Another court victory for
Women of Zimbabwe Arise
By: Violet Gonda
August 29, 2006 – (SW Radio Africa) A Harare
Magistrate on Monday threw out charges against 63 members of the
group Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) saying giving roses and singing
on Valentine’s Day is not a nuisance.
More than 200 WOZA members had intended to march
to the parliament building in Harare on the 14th February, giving
out roses and cards for Valentines Day, but riot police descended
on them before they had spread much of their message of “Bread
and Roses”, a protest call for affordable food and a dignified
life. Babies strapped on their mother’s backs were also detained.
In giving his ruling the Magistrate said: “Police
are supposed to maintain law and order but they failed to do so
and went on a ‘fishing expedition’ to arrest any women
in the vicinity of the protest. They did not use reasonable doubt
in the manner of arrest and provided no evidence to incriminate
the accused. It is better to set free a guilty person than to convict
an innocent one.”
The women were detained for more than four days
in filthy and overcrowded cells - even beyond the time allowed under
the Public Order and Security Act (POSA). By this time the activists
were supposed to have been charged under this draconian legislation
as, in theory, the police cannot hold them for more than 48 hours
without being charged.
In the end they were facing charges under the Miscellaneous
Offences Act on allegations of “acting in a manner which is
likely to lead to a breach of the peace or to create a nuisance
or obstruction.” The WOZA women have consistently and persistently
taken to the streets to press for a socially just Zimbabwe. The
demonstrations are usually violently broken up by the police. This
is the fourth court case won by WOZA members.
One of the victims Ellah Tawengwa who attended
the trial on Monday said the Magistrate noted that none of the police
officers were able to identify any of the 63 as being at the demonstration
or link them to any evidence of banners, placards, fliers or roses.
The magistrate also said no member of the public had testified as
to a breach of their peace or that giving roses and singing was
a nuisance. He went on further to say the police ill-treated women
and their babies and exposed them to poor and inhuman conditions
and “incarcerated them before trial and convicted the accused
before trial.”
Responding to the decision in a statement the group
said; “After several months of remand hearings, the 63 brave
women that refused to pay fines were finally vindicated. WOZA salutes
their continued commitment to freedoms of assembly and expression
and full enjoyment of these and other rights. We hope that others
will follow their example and join us in demanding bread and roses
for all Zimbabweans.”
From: http://www.swradioafrica.com/news290806/wozavictory290806.htm
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