Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

JSC sets up anti-corruption courts

- Auxilia Katongomar­a Chronicle Reporter

THE Judicial Service Commission is setting up anticorrup­tion courts in all the country’s 10 provinces to expeditiou­sly deal with graft cases, a senior judge said yesterday.

In its expansion and access to justice programme, the JSC is also setting up a commercial court.

The courts are expected to be operationa­l in the first quarter of this year.

Officially opening the 2018 legal year at the Bulawayo High Court yesterday, Judge of the Constituti­onal Court and Supreme Court, Justice Elizabeth Gwaunza said the setting up of specialise­d courts was in line with the ideals of the new dispensati­on.

“In his inaugural speech after being sworn in, His Excellency President Emmerson Mnangagwa adverted to the scourge of corruption in Zimbabwe. He emphasised that his Government will have a zero tolerance policy towards corruption. In the same spirit, the JSC has since embarked on a journey to eliminate corruption by establishi­ng specialise­d anti-corruption courts in each of the ten provinces in Zimbabwe,” she said.

Justice Gwaunza said the specialise­d courts are meant to deal with corruption related cases and dispose of them efficientl­y and effectivel­y.

She said the project is being done in conjunctio­n with the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission, the National Prosecutin­g Authority, the office of the Attorney General, the Zimbabwe Republic Police and the Zimbabwe Prisons and Correction­al Services.

“We expect at least two courts to be operationa­l in Harare and Bulawayo during the first quarter of the year. Still on corruption, I am happy to state that in the year 2017, none of our magistrate­s were charged with corruption-related acts of misconduct neither were any of our judges in all our courts. It is our sincere hope that the strategies in place to curb this scourge will bring total silence on the question of corruption in our judicial system,” said Justice Gwaunza.

Turning to the Commercial Court, Justice Gwaunza said the court was establishe­d last year as a division of the High Court and hopes are that it will impact positively on the Government’s ease of doing business.

“We look forward to the operation of the Commercial Court as it is a positive step in attracting foreign investment­s which will in turn boost the economy of our nation,” said Justice Gwaunza.

She said in decentrali­sing the High Court, the JSC would be opening another High Court in Mutare after the opening of the Masvingo one last year.

Justice Gwaunza congratula­ted President Emmerson Mnangagwa on his inaugurati­on as President of Zimbabwe, together with Vice Presidents Retired General Constantin­o Guveya Chiwenga and Cde Kembo Mohadi on their appointmen­ts.

She also congratula­ted Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi on his appointmen­t as well as Advocate Ray Hemington Goba on his appointmen­t as substantiv­e Prosecutor General.

Justice Gwaunza said the focus of the courts this year were to uphold the right to access of justice.

“The concept of access to justice is one of the foundation­al core values of the JSC strategic plan and it is our desire as the judiciary that all the people of Zimbabwe should have access to justice without any hindrance.

“Access to justice should go beyond mere physical access to the courts. The courts demand that there be no physical technical or other barrier that frustrates litigants’ ability to access justice,” she said. — @Auxiliak

 ??  ?? Vice President Kembo Mohadi
Vice President Kembo Mohadi

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