Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Police boss Matanga dragged to court

- Peter Matika Senior Life Reporter

THE Hwange Colliery Company has dragged Police Commission­er-General Tandabantu Godwin Matanga to the High Court seeking an urgent order to force him to give orders to the police to eject people who have been protesting at the company’s premises in Hwange.

Wives of employees of the company besieged the company offices protesting that the coal mining firm pay their husbands their outstandin­g salaries. In the urgent chamber applicatio­n for an interdict filed through its lawyers, Mawere Sibanda Commercial Lawyers on behalf of the company, Hwange cited Comm-Gen as the first respondent and Officer-in-Charge of Hwange Police Station as the second respondent. In the applicatio­n, Hwange Colliery is seeking the court to force the police to evict the protestors.

“The applicant having sought the assistance of the police by engaging the second respondent who is in charge of the police station closest to the applicant’s main office. The second respondent having refused to intervene in the demonstrat­ions therefore left the applicant with no other remedy except to approach this Honourable Court, as its business operations are being disrupted by the said demonstrat­ors. The applicant accordingl­y hereby approaches the Honourable Court for urgent relief as set out in the draft herein,” read part of the chamber applicatio­n.

The company said they want police bosses to discharge the functions of their office in terms of the Public Order and Security Act (Posa) as the regulating authority by dispersing the “unlawful” gathering of demonstrat­ors. The company wants the protestors to be prevented from disrupting coal mining activities.

According to the applicatio­n, Hwange’s business activities at the main office have been disturbed since 29 January by a group of demonstrat­ors purporting to be the the wives of the company’s employees.

“The demonstrat­ion by the said persons being illegal in that they are on the Applicant’s private property, although not employed by the Applicant and they have no permission for the court or from the Applicant, itself to be to be demonstrat­ing on the Applicant’s private property,” read the applicatio­n.

In his founding affidavit deposed together with the applicatio­n, company secretary and legal representa­tive Mr Allen Masiya said the company was also seeking an interdict against the demonstrat­ors.

“The demonstrat­ors did not have any court order or clearance for carrying out their protest. To make matters worse, because they are not the applicant’s employees, they did not have applicant’s permission to enter the premises. However, despite efforts of the applicant’s security personnel to deny the demonstrat­ors access, the groups forcefully entered the premises and surrounded the applicant’s administra­tion building. They began disrupting the dayto-day operations of the applicant, by singing, dancing and making threats against applicant’s managing director. To date, and as I depose this affidavit, the protestors are still stationed at the administra­tions building, with others scattered around the applicant’s premises,” he said. The High Court is set to hear the case on Tuesday. Wives of HCCL employees have been demanding that the coal mining company fulfils its pledge to pay them outstandin­g salaries, after agreeing to a scheme of arrangemen­t last year. Hundreds of women camped at the management office in Hwange where they used tree branches to block management from entering the premises. Some of them have been sleeping at the premises as part of their demonstrat­ion.

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