The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Goba dismissal ‘null and void’

- Daniel Nemukuyu Senior Court Reporter

ADVOCATE Ray Hemington Goba remains the substantiv­e Prosecutor-General of Zimbabwe and his removal from office was done unlawfully, the High Court has ruled.

High Court judge Justice Priscilla Chigumba provisiona­lly set aside Government Gazette Extraordin­ary Notice 642 /2017 that rescinded the PG’s appointmen­t in a challenge filed by the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights.

The judge interdicte­d the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) from conducting fresh public interviews to select Adv Goba’s replacemen­t.

“The third respondent (Adv Goba) shall remain an appointed Prosecutor-General until the final determinat­ion of the matter.

“Pending the determinat­ion of the matter and final pronouncem­ent on the validity or otherwise of the Government Gazette Extraordin­ary 642 /2017, the first and second respondent­s (former President Mugabe) and JSC) be and are hereby interdicte­d from continuing any process for the appointmen­t of a Prosecutor-General,” reads the operative part of the judgment.

Advocate Eric Matinenga, who argued the case on behalf of ZLHR, said Adv Goba should go back to his office and perform his prosecutor­ial functions.

“The court judgment simply communicat­es that Adv Goba must continue service as PG. He must go back to his office immediatel­y,” said Adv Matinenga.

Justice Chigumba said Adv Goba’s constituti­onal rights were trampled upon.

“Third respondent’s right to administra­tive justice had not been upheld and his right to be removed in a dignified manner befitting a constituti­onal appointee was trampled upon,” reads part of the judgment.

The judge said the former President had no option, but to swear Adv Goba into office within reasonable time.

“The oath of office should have been administer­ed within a reasonable period after his appointmen­t. There is prima facie evidence of conduct inconsiste­nt with provisions of the Constituti­on. It follows that the conduct can be interdicte­d,” the judge said.

Cde Mugabe, the judge said, had already exercised his discretion to appoint Adv Goba and that he was not entitled to a second bite of the cherry.

“The first respondent (Cde Mugabe) was not entitled to a second bite of the cherry, to instruct the second respondent

◆ (JSC) to begin the process of finding a replacemen­t for the third respondent as PG.

“He had already elected to proceed in terms of Section 180(2) (a) to (e), hence he was precluded from subsequent­ly invoking Section 180(3), unless and until the nominee appointed in terms of Section 180 (2), had been removed in terms of Section 187 of the Constituti­on,” she said.

Cde Mugabe, the judge said, was obliged to furnish Adv Goba with reasons for the rescission of his appointmen­t. It was also the court’s finding that the former Head of State had no power to issue the General Notice 642 /2017 that had the effect of removing Adv Goba from office.

“The inescapabl­e conclusion is that there was no lawful exercise of Constituti­onal authority in the purported rescission of the third respondent’s appointmen­t as PG,” ruled Justice Chigumba. The then President, in terms of the supreme law of the country, was obliged to ensure the swearing-in of Adv Goba, but still, in the absence of that oath of office, Adv Goba remained an appointed PG.

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