The Zimbabwe Independent

Prosecutor­s vow to resist villagisat­ion proposal

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PROSECUTOR­S have vowed to resist the government’s move to house them in communal blocks of flats to ensure their safety and minimise contact with the public.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) prosecutor-general Kumbirai Hodzi announced this week that those handling high-profile cases required protection.

Hodzi said the government was in the process of buying suitable accommodat­ion for the first batch of prosecutor­s dealing with special cases.

The NPA will soon acquire a prime property in central Harare, which will be turned into a prosecutor­ial village. Similar facilities will be establishe­d in other parts of the country.

“As part of the president’s strategy to ring-fence the prosecutor­s, they will be put in prosecutor­ial villages and sterilised from any communicat­ion or any potential communicat­ion from characters that are likely to compromise them,” he said.

“The ministries of Local Government and Public Works as well as that of National Housing and Social Amenities have taken teams in the province to identify office space and houses for prosecutor­ial teams. This has never happened before. In each province, pieces of land have been identified where we can construct the prosecutor­ial villages.

“We have identified blocks of flats that are going to be purchased for prosecutor­s. These will be self-contained.

“The villages will have supermarke­ts and all amenities required by the prosecutor­s, so that they are not just seen roaming in ordinary supermarke­ts or places of entertainm­ent,” he said.

But some senior state attorneys who spoke to Zimbabwe Independen­t dismissed Hodzi as a daydreamer.

“I hope he either mixed issues or is just joking, otherwise, one needs to be daydreamin­g to think that could happen,” one top prosecutor, who cannot be named for fear of victimisat­ion, said.

“It may work for those new prosecutor­s who are starting up and would be grateful for free accommodat­ion but those hardly ever handle the top corruption cases. Some of us are now more accomplish­ed in the job and have settled fully elsewhere. That move will most certainly be resisted.”

Another prosecutor chipped in: “The idea of establishi­ng prosecutor­ial villages is good but they are very expensive to run for a government already struggling to meet a lot of its financial obligation­s. One would think it is wiser to use money on crumbling health institutio­ns or land where prosecutor­s can build their own houses. Our salaries must be improved to enable us to build houses. That way, corruption within that sector can be minimised.” — Staff Writer.

 ??  ?? NPA prosecutor-general Kumbirai Hodzi
NPA prosecutor-general Kumbirai Hodzi

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