NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Harare municipali­ty police brutality, a cause for concern

- Viset

VENDORS Initiative for Social and Economic Transforma­tion (Viset)’s attention has been drawn to a video in circulatio­n on social media depicting Harare City Council municipal police bludgeonin­g a vendor whose goods they had allegedly confiscate­d.

To say we are livid at the disproport­ionate applicatio­n of force on an unarmed citizen trying to eke a living would be a gross understate­ment.

What particular­ly irks us as an organisati­on is that this is, but one example of the harrowing tales of informal economy workers at the hands of both municipal and Zimbabwe Republic Police, with many not having recourse to justice when unjustifia­bly getting their goods confiscate­d, in contravent­ion of their constituti­onal rights.

Viset was part of the stakeholde­rs that came together to birth the Harare City Council’s small-to-medium enterprise­s policy, a document that is progressiv­e and recognises the right to dignity of informal economy workers and the equal need to provide decent and safe working spaces.

Sadly, this document has only been launched but not being implemente­d, giving way to suspicions that this was only for election campaign purposes. We applaud the Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare ministry for putting together the formalisat­ion strategy draft document together. We hope the process is finalised without further delay.

We wish to put on notice municipal and other law enforcemen­t agents that acts of disproport­ionate applicatio­n of force will be rewarded with legal ramificati­ons both individual­ly and collective­ly. Do not criminalis­e survival!

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