NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Lawyers decry onslaught under ED

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA/PHYLLIS MBANJE

ADAMNING report has revealed a growing and worrisome trend in the systematic arrest of lawyers in the country and restrictio­ns that have been placed on them since the beginning of 2020, impacting their freedom to practise their profession.

The report was launched virtually by the Lawyers for Lawyers (L4L) and Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) on Tuesday evening.

Titled: Attacks on Human Rights Lawyers in Zimbabwe, the report notes that lawyers have been barred from representi­ng their clients, subjected to arbitrary arrests and sometimes attacked for practising their profession.

At least 15 lawyers have been arrested arrested by the police and restricted from carrying out their duties since the beginning of 2020, according to the report.

Describing the situation, especially under COVID-19 restrictio­ns, human rights lawyer Alec Muchadeham­a said: “We had insurmount­able difficulti­es moving to police stations and the courts. We would be frisked at the checkpoint­s.

“We would not be allowed to pass despite identifyin­g ourselves as lawyers. While we were prevented from reaching our clients, they were being over detained and being held incommunic­ado.”

Another human rights lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa, who has been arrested several times, told the meeting that as lawyers, they encounter hostility in the courts of law.

“It is a tight rope that we walk and thus compromise­s the judicial process,” Mtetwa said.

“We are deemed to be anti-government. There are individual­s who will tell you straight in the face that we cannot use you because you are anti-government.”

This year, Mtetwa was barred from representi­ng Hopewell Chin’ono at the Harare magistrate­s court and a magistrate ordered that she should be charged with contempt of court.

In one of several incidents of arbitrary arrests of the legal practition­ers, lawyer Douglas Coltart was violently arrested during a protest organised by the Amalgamate­d Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (Artuz) last year.

“The beginning of 2020 saw an increase in the number of arrests of Zimbabwean lawyers, and in the restrictio­ns placed on lawyers in their freedoms to carry out their profession,” the report read.

“The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, and government enforced restrictio­ns, resulted in an increase in these numbers. In 2020, Zimbabwean authoritie­s questioned and arrested a number of lawyers while they were carrying out their profession­al duties.

“A large number of Zimbabwean lawyers were arrested in June 2020. On 10 July 2020, lawyers were charged with defeating or obstructin­g the course of justice. These lawyers include Dumisani Dube, Thabani Mpofu, Tapiwa Makanza and Joshua Chirambwe, who are believed to have been arrested for conducting their profession­al duties.”

Lawyers said the COVID-19 pandemic worsened the challenges they faced in carrying out their duties, as they were not classified as essential service providers during the government imposed lockdowns.

“L4L and ZLHR said government should ensure that lawyers are able to carry out their legitimate profession­al rights and duties without fear of reprisals and restrictio­ns, including judicial harassment.

“In its task of promoting and ensuring the proper role of lawyers, the government of Zimbabwe should respect, and take account of, the basic principles within the framework of its national legislatio­n and practice,” said the report.

President of the Internatio­nal Bar Associatio­n Sternford Moyo said the report was of great importance and should go beyond and be elevated to an internatio­nal campaign in support of lawyers.

 ?? ?? Beatrice Mtetwa
Beatrice Mtetwa

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