The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Nyagura trial put on hold

- Tendai Rupapa Senior Court Reporter

THE trial of suspended University of Zimbabwe (UZ) Levi Nyagura, who is accused of illegally awarding former First Lady Grace Mugabe a PhD, has been put on hold pending the determinat­ion of his applicatio­n at the Constituti­onal Court (Concourt).

Nyagura was supposed to stand trial yesterday following the dismissal of his applicatio­n for referral of the case to the Concourt for lack of merit.

In his applicatio­n for referral of the matter to the Concourt, Nyagura cited infringeme­nt of his constituti­onal rights to a fair trial.

Having lost the applicatio­n, Nyagura then filed an applicatio­n to bring his constituti­onal challenge before the Concourt bench directly in terms of Section 85(1) of the Constituti­on.

Representi­ng the State, Mr Tapiwa Godzi from the President’s Special Anti-Corruption Unit said since Nyagura had filed his applicatio­n at the Concourt, proceeding­s at the lower court should be halted.

“Accused filed his applicatio­n for direct access and in view of that, when such applicatio­n is filed, the court’s hands are tied. The accused person must be given a chance to have his matter heard at the Concourt,” he said.

Advocate Lewis Uriri, who was representi­ng Nyagura, advised the court that he would not be representi­ng him anymore.

He said he was recusing himself for personal reasons, which he did not disclose in court.

This was after magistrate Mr Lazini Ncube had notified Nyagura of his next remand date, October 22.

Adv Uriri was being instructed by Muzangaza Mandaza and Tomana Legal Practition­ers to act on behalf of Nyagura.

Nyagura, through his lawyers, argued that Messrs Tapiwa Godzi and Michael Chakandida both from the President’s Special Anti-Corruption Unit, who are representi­ng the State, have no authority to prosecute.

He said the Acting Prosecutor-General, by granting the pair authority to prosecute when they are not employees of the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA), was in breach of accused’s right to the equal protection and benefit of the law, as well as right to a fair trial.

Mr Godzi submitted that Section 5 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act gives the PG powers acting independen­tly to issue authority to prosecute to a certain category of people that included any legal practition­er.

The court concurred with the State’s submission­s and ruled in its favour.

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