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NEWS
RELEASE
INTERNATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION
the global voice of the legal profession
[For Immediate Release, 21 March 2007]
Zimbabwe:
Violence and threats against lawyers condemned by the IBA
The International Bar Association (IBA)’s Human Rights
Institute today condemned the recent violence and threats
made against Zimbabwean lawyers by police and other officials.
On 20
March, Ms Beatrice Mtetwa, a prominent human rights lawyer,
and her assistant were violently manhandled and threatened
by police officers whilst serving them court papers. Ms Mtetwa
has represented many people who have been arrested for attempting
to exercise their fundamental human rights to free association,
assembly and expression.
This incident
is the latest in a series of disturbing reports of threats
against lawyers involved in representing those involved in
the 7 March prayer meeting in Highfield. As the IBA reported
last week, many of those involved in the meeting were arrested
and brutally attacked by police in detention.
Other
reports include the following:
- On 19
March, lawyer Mr Harrison Nkomo was threatened with arrest
by Assistant Commissioner Mabunda when he tried to serve court
processes and notices.
- On 18 March, Mr Andrew Makoni, was reportedly threatened
with ‘disappearance’ at the Harare police station
whilst attempting to serve a High Court order on the Assistant
Commissioner.
- On 17 March, lawyer Mr Tafadzwa Mugabe was threatened with
assault and arrest when trying to assert his clients’
rights to leave the country to access medical treatment in
South Africa. His clients were among those brutally attacked
by police following the 7 March prayer meeting. He was also
told to stop representing those clients.
- Also on 17 March 2007, lawyer Mar Dzimbabwe Chimbga, was
threatened by officials at the airport when returning to Harare,
and was told to stop taking up cases involving opposition
members.
- On 11 March 2007, Mr Harrison Nkomo was assaulted with a
baton by officers at Machipisa Police Station after inquiring
about the whereabouts of the opposition leaders arrested following
the prayer meeting on 7 March.
The IBA
is extremely anxious about the safety of lawyers in Zimbabwe,
particularly those involved in representing opposition members.
The intimidation of lawyers in this manner breaches Article
14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
and Article 7 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples'
Rights, which guarantee the right to legal counsel of one’s
choosing. Zimbabwe is a party to both these instruments.
The IBA
would also like to draw attention to the provisions of the
Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers, which guarantee the
right of all persons to be assisted by a lawyer to protect
their rights and to defend them in all stages of criminal
proceedings. The Basic Principles also provide that Governments
must ensure that lawyers are able to perform all of their
professional functions without intimidation, hindrance or
harassment. Further, Governments are obliged to ensure that
lawyers shall not suffer or be threatened with sanctions for
any action as part of their professional duties. In situations
where the security of lawyers is threatened as a result of
discharging their duties, they must be adequately safeguarded
by the authorities.
It is
evident that the Government of Zimbabwe is not protecting
but violating the rights of its lawyers in violation of the
Basic Principles. The IBA calls on the Government of Zimbabwe
to take immediate steps to ensure that these rights are protected
and that lawyers are able to perform their role without fear
of violence or intimidation.
‘The
recent threats made to lawyers place the rule of law in Zimbabwe
in even greater peril’, Mark Ellis, Executive Director
of the International Bar Association stated. ‘The international
community must increase pressure on the Mugabe Government
to end this series of unprecedented attacks on basic human
rights.’
‘This
disregard for international human rights obligations and the
rule of law is of serious concern, stated Justice Richard
Goldstone, Co-Chair of the HRI. ‘I call on the Mugabe
Government to ensure strict observance of its own laws and
international treaty obligations’.
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