|
Zimbabwe: Women Human Rights
Defenders Bear Brunt of Govt Oppression
December 1, 2006 – (Zimbabwe Independent)
As the world commemorated International Women Human Rights Defenders
Day this week, Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) takes the
opportunity to highlight some of the hazards faced by such activists
in their work to protect and promote human rights.
From March to September this year, ZLHR represented
over 550 individual women human rights defenders charged with various
offences ranging from obstruction of traffic to conduct conducive
to public disorder, all in their attempt to petition local and national
leadership on social, political and economic issues which continue
to bedevil our country. Not a single successful prosecution of these
women human rights defenders has been recorded since 2003 when ZLHR
embarked on the human rights defenders project. This has confirmed
our perception that laws are being used in Zimbabwe as a tool of
persecution rather than of prosecution.
The accounts of the arrests, harassment, conditions
of detention, assaults and torture exemplify the typical treatment
meted out to women human rights defenders in Zimbabwe when they
attempt to assert their rights, and the culture of impunity and
disrespect by the law enforcement agents for the fundamental rights
of the people they are obliged by law to protect:
* On May 10 2003, 46 women were arrested during
a march to commemorate Mothers' Day in Bulawayo. They were detained
at Bulawayo Central and Nkulumane police stations. ZLHR lawyers
attended at both stations, but were told that the Law and Order
Section at Bulawayo Central was closed and nobody knew where the
women were being held. The lawyers were not allowed to have sight
of the detention book and the duty inspector advised them to see
a senior police officer who was equally unhelpful. To avoid spending
the night in custody and to buy their freedom, the women were forced
to pay fines of contravening section 7 (b) Miscellaneous Offence
Act (MOA). The fines were subsequently challenged in court.
* On June 14 2004, 43 women, including some with
breastfeeding babies, were arrested at a community hall in Bulawayo
while discussing potential self-help projects. Legal advice had
been sought and provided to the women to the effect that, in terms
of the Public Order and Security Act (Posa), police notification
was not required. The women were detained overnight at Bulawayo
Central police station for contravening section 24 of Posa which
criminalises the holding of public political meetings without notifying
the regulating authority. They were released after the magistrate
ruled that meetings such as the one in which the women had participated
were exempted from notification.
* Following the government's introduction of the
Non-Governmental Organisations Bill which sought, among other things,
to criminalise human rights work through the proscription of receipt
of foreign funding for such activities, 50 women were arrested on
October 5 2004 for attempting to hand over a petition to parliament
against the promulgation of the Bill.
Among the arrested women were journalists who were
covering the demonstration. The women were whisked to Harare Central
police station where ZLHR lawyers were denied access to their clients
and had to sneak into the holding cells under the guise of seeing
another client. The attempts were unsuccessful, as lawyers failed
to interview all their clients. On the morning of October 6 2004,
lawyers succeeded in accessing the women human rights defenders
who complained that the holding cells were filthy and overcrowded
and that the police continuously harassed them verbally and physically.
The Officer-In-Charge admitted during a meeting
with the lawyers that the charges were frivolous and would not stand
in a court of law but refused to release the women. On the next
day, officers from the Attorney-General's Office indicated that
they were prepared to prosecute the women under section 19 and 24(1)
of Posa. Bail for the detainees was not opposed. The accused appeared
in court and were granted free bail and remanded to November 11
2004, on which date the charges were withdrawn before plea, confirming
the use of Posa as a tool of harassment and repression.
* On March 31 2005, over 300 women gathered in
Africa Unity Square in Harare on the eve of the parliamentary elections
to pray for a peaceful polling and post polling environment. Around
1800 hours, the women were arrested, and ZLHR lawyers who were deployed
to attend to them were informed by the police that they were not
allowed access to their clients until the next morning.
The following day the lawyers reported to the police
station, where it was established that over 265 women had been arrested
and were occupying the backyard parking lot of the police station.
The officer commanding Police Internal Security Intelligence (PISI),
Inspector Ndou, indicated that they had arrested the women for allegedly
contravening a section of the Miscellaneous Offences Act (MOA) or
the Road Traffic Act in that they had blocked a thorough-fare or
pavement.
The police finally settled on charging them with
contravening section 3(2) of the MOA which provides that any person
who encumbers or obstructs the free passage along a street, road,
thoroughfare, side walk or pavement shall be guilty of an offence
liable to a fine or imprisonment for a period not exceeding three
months.
The police were not keen to take the women to court
to answer to the charges alleged. After much consultation with the
women the detainees were forced into paying admission of guilt fines
in order to buy their freedom. This position was agreed to by all
the women as they had been subjected to cruel and inhuman conditions
of detention such as the use of one toilet, sleeping in the open
all night, and also being assaulted by law enforcement officers
during arrest. Some of the women were hospitalised and treated for
various injuries and complaints were lodged in relation to their
ordeal with the police and in the police cells. A fine of $25 000
was agreed for each of the 265 women but later successfully challenged
the payment of the fines in court.
* On May 4, members of the Women of Zimbabwe Arise
(Woza) staged a demonstration in Bulawayo protesting against the
exorbitant increase in tuition fees for primary, secondary and tertiary
institutions. Over 166 people were arrested including 77 school
children who were released on the same day.
The activists were detained at different police
stations in and around Bulawayo -- Bulawayo Central, Queenspark,
Mzilikazi, Hillside, Donnington and Sauerstown. The recording of
warned and cautioned statements only began on May 6 after the detainees
had already spent two days in detention. The docket was taken to
the Public Prosecutor on May 8, but he declined to prosecute and
ordered the detainees to be immediately released.
The police had intended to charge the women human
rights defenders with contravening section 7C of the MOA which relates
to any act that is likely to lead to a breach of the peace or to
create a nuisance or obstruction. The women reported death threats
by police officers against the leadership of the women's group,
and ZLHR lawyers were forced to deliver a formal letter of complaint
to the police with a request to launch an investigation into the
alleged death threats; and
* On September 11, 107 Woza members were arrested
during a march to Town House. The women had been carrying objection
letters and placards with them to Town House demanding better service
delivery in Harare, more affordable rates and the dissolution of
the illegal commission currently running the city of Harare. The
women were met at the entrance to Town House by police and were
arrested. Five police trucks ferried those arrested to Harare Central
police station where they were separated and taken to six different
police stations in Harare -- Braeside, Mbare, Glen Norah, Highlands,
Chitungwiza and Harare Central in an effort to frustrate the efforts
of their lawyers in securing their release.
Some of the women were tortured during detention
and a pregnant woman among those arrested went into labour and was
rushed to Parirenyatwa Hospital where she later gave birth. Fifty-six
women required medical treatment for bruises and skin diseases and
upper respiratory tract disorder which they acquired in detention.
Many exhibited signs of mental distress. They were charged under
the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform Act), which was immediately
challenged as unconstitutional.
These cases handled by lawyers and members of ZLHR
provide a shocking picture of the operating environment for women
human rights defenders in Zimbabwe and the abuse to which they are
consistently subjected. ZLHR is appalled at the comprehensive and
systematic desecration of human rights accorded to human beings
in general and women in particular. There has been an overt intensification
of repression by key state actors against women human rights defenders
over the last few years. This growing tendency to restrict political
and social space has been consolidated with startling impunity,
selective application of the law, and the continued promulgation
of laws which inhibit the enjoyment, promotion and protection of
fundamental rights by women human rights defenders.
Further, the existence of conservative and fundamentalist
prejudices as embedded in traditional views alongside general human
rights aspirations has meant that women human rights defenders have
led a war on two fronts, the national and the domestic. With such
convenient excuses as "national security" and "culture",
a vicious and voracious clampdown on such defenders has been perpetrated
by both state and non-state actors.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200612010821.html
|