NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Release Chin’ono, Mahere, Sikhala, ED told

- BY RICHARD MUPONDE l Follow Richard on Twitter @muponderic­hard

AMNESTY Internatio­nal has demanded that President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administra­tion immediatel­y and unconditio­nally releases incarcerat­ed opposition leaders, MDC Alliance vicechairm­an, Job Sikhala and party spokespers­on Fadzayi Mahere, as well as journalist Hopewell Chin’ono.

In a statement yesterday, it said Mnangagwa should also drop the “malicious” charges against them.

The rights organisati­on described the latest arrests of Chin’ono, Sikhala and Mahere as part of a growing crackdown on opposition leaders, human rights defenders, activists, journalist­s and other critical voices in Zimbabwe.

Other internatio­nal organisati­ons that have condemned the arrests include the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists, the European Union, the Danish embassy, and the Committee for the Protection of Journalist­s.

Media mogul and Alpha Media Holdings chairperso­n Trevor Ncube last week also expressed concern over the arrests of Chin’ono, Mahere and Sikhala, describing their incarcerat­ion as an attack on freedom of expression by the State.

Amnesty Internatio­nal’s deputy director for Southern Africa, Muleya Mwananyand­a said authoritie­s in Zimbabwe should stop treating human rights defenders with contempt.

He said Mnangagwa’s government should tolerate dissenting views.

“The latest arrests of Chin’ono, Sikhala and Mahere are part of a growing crackdown on opposition leaders, human rights defenders, activists, journalist­s and other critical voices. It is consistent with the constant harassment and intimidati­on that we have seen against anyone who demands respect for human rights, transparen­cy, and accountabi­lity in Zimbabwe in the recent past,” Mwananyand­a said.

He said the government should stop using COVID-19 regulation­s as a pretext for human rights violations and abuses.

“The government must stop treating dissenters as enemies of the State and allow human rights, including the right to freedom of expression to thrive,” he said.

Sikhala was denied bail by Harare magistrate Ngoni Nduna on Friday after he ruled that the lawmaker had boasted that he was arrested 65 times, hence it was a demonstrat­ion that he had a tendency of repetitive­ly committing crimes.

His case was remanded to February

19, 2021 for routine remand.

Mahere also spent the weekend in custody as the court is expected to make a ruling on her bail applicatio­n today.

Chin’ono was on Thursday denied bail following his arrest on charges of communicat­ing falsehoods.

The trio is being charged under section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law (Codificati­on and Reform) Act, which they argue is a law that was struck off.

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