The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Court advises cops to reform

- Mashudu Netsianda Bulawayo Bureau

A HIGH Court judge has blasted police for violating provisions of the Constituti­on, saying they risk being rendered useless in the wake of a rising crime rate in the country if they do not reform.

Bulawayo High Court judge Justice Nicholas Mathonsi made the remarks following an appeal against conviction and sentence by Bukhosi Khuboni.

Khuboni and three unnamed accomplice­s were arrested by the police after they were falsely incriminat­ed without sufficient evidence linking them to the alleged offences.

The quartet was convicted of 12 counts of unlawful entry and theft by a Bulawayo regional magistrate.

They were sentenced to 18 years in jail, four of which were suspended on condition of good behaviour.

Six months were further suspended on condition they restitute the complainan­ts the stolen money.

Khuboni and his accomplice­s were part of a gang that terrorised Bulawayo residents in the western suburbs by breaking into their homes at night and robbing them of their valuables.

They used violence and ordered their victims to cover their heads with blankets before robbing them.

Justice Mathonsi’s concern was directed at Francis Masuku and Chrispen Maplanka, the two detectives who investigat­ed Khuboni’s case.

He said the two cops did shoddy investigat­ions when they only interrogat­ed Khuboni and his accomplice­s before forcing them to identify the alleged homes they had broken into for indication­s.

“If the police service in this country does not reform or remain determined to bury heads in the sand in typical ostrich style when the courts repeatedly advise it to re-adjust its ways of doing business in line with the requiremen­ts of the new constituti­onal order, then it runs the genuine risk of being rendered ineffectiv­e in the face of what appears to be escalating criminal activity among communitie­s,” said Justice Mathonsi.

He said police were not respecting the constituti­onal rights of suspects.

“Many times the police force has been advised to comply with the law when conducting investigat­ions and in particular to respect the rights of arrested people for the successful prosecutio­n of criminals,” he said. “Arrested and accused persons also have rights enshrined in the Constituti­on of the country, which cannot be derogated.”

Justice Mathonsi said a lot of dangerous criminals were being let off the hook because investigat­ors appeared to ignore the constituti­onal rights of suspects.

“The appellant (Khuboni) was never taken to an identifica­tion parade,” he said. “All that police did was to invite the complainan­ts to the police station and ask them whether the appellant was one of the persons who had robbed them.

“It was no identifica­tion at all. A trembling witness whose door has just been broken down at night and is asked to cover her head with a blanket cannot be said to be capable of good identifica­tion.”

Justice Mathonsi ruled that there was no reliable evidence upon which Khuboni could be convicted in the other counts where he was not even found in possession of the stolen property.

He set aside conviction and sentence for the 10 counts and dismissed the appeal against conviction and sentence in two counts.

“Effectivel­y, we uphold the sentence of a total of three years imprisonme­nt, but will alter it slightly in respect of the suspended portion of it,” he said. “Of the three years imprisonme­nt, six months is suspended on condition of future good behaviour, while one month is suspended on condition he restitutes the complainan­t $9 by 31 December 2017.”

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