The Zimbabwe Independent

Time to look beyond ritual murderers

- Sharon Hofisi LAWYER

I ONCE represente­d people charged with murder in court. ™at was where I had my first real encounter with the subject of intentiona­l or negligent killing. It was not a positive experience. Neverthele­ss, I got some acquittals. I remember the cases well. ™ey took my inexperien­ced product of law school and taught me to understand the criminal laws and procedures of this country with deep preparatio­n. So I took the cases on a pro deo basis. Put simply, this means acting for God. But with the increasing ritual killings, a lack of deliberate offences on ritual killings and honour crimes is a serious lacuna in our criminal justice system.

™e purpose of criminal laws should mirror the nature of the society itself. Societies that are governed through laws are called to heal the divisions caused by violators of the law. When a society seems to be in danger of endless commission­s of heinous crimes, focusing too much on investigat­ion machinery and work and neglecting criminal law reform may pose further deep seated challenges. What often happens, however, is that even if the laws are reformed, we need to guard against reactionar­y responses to endemic problems. If the purpose of criminal law reform is to curb impunity in all forms of killings and deal decisively with utter disregard of the sanctity of human life, then a law can be a healthy first step in protecting the rights of vulnerable sections of society such as women, children, persons with albinism and other disabiliti­es.

Even a criminal law reform committee will be horrified to learn that ritual motivators are not part of the suspects to be arrested. We are encouraged by the fact that our criminal laws allow for the arrest and prosecutio­n of accomplice­s. But psyched people are usually afraid of the unknown. ™e psyched ritual killers strike fast, simultaneo­usly attacking unsuspecti­ng children or persons with disabiliti­es.

™e details that usually emerge after the gruesome killings are too numerous and disturbing. We definitely cannot bring our conscience to understand the difference between the actual killer and the one who motivates the killer to do so. ™e killer believes it is going to be an “all-for-purplelife” killing. Later, he is taught that the act was natural after all when he gets caught. It was his darkest ritual psyched moments that brought the longest, bloodiest, most heinous crimes to carry out. It costs innocent lives and no financial rewards as promised. And most families of the killers are left destitute. ™e breadwinne­r is locked up and the family is drawn into incessant wars of appeasing vengeful spirits as contemplat­ed in our traditiona­l faiths.

™e hideous scars born by the families of the victims will last a very long time. But these ritual killing motivators are cunning and they will continue to hoodwink many people into psyched killings. ™ey may never get their comeuppanc­e. Certainly the time has come to act decisively on criminal law reform on ritual murder and honour crimes in Zimbabwe. Legislatio­n, the passing of Acts in Parliament, is the most important of Parliament’s many tasks. I believe many stakeholde­rs can agree on the explanator­y memorandum for a Ritual Murders and Honour Crimes Bill. ™e long title of that Bill can deal with issues relating to the ritual murders and honour crimes and other purposes connected with these issues. ™e enacting formula can be decided by the nature of offences being committed usually against vulnerable sections of societies such as children, elderly women, persons with disabiliti­es and so forth.

Perhaps the major point to grasp about ritual killings is that a psychic person, or even a bogus part of a psychic person, promises someone a lavish lifestyle once a heinous crime is committed. It could be the killing of a sibling, distant relative or some stranger. Exactly what is meant by “ritual” is not necessaril­y obvious since the killing of the person is controlled by the killer who uses the elaborate descriptio­ns from the psychic leader. A small change in the psychic instructio­ns can make a huge difference - so we hear from failed ritual killing missions. Each small step is catalysed and crystallis­ed by the need for hot porridge riches. Many of these random killings may do the killer no harm if he observes the instructio­ns (muko). Sometimes the killer will destroy the fighting powers of the deceased through some further rituals, kutsipika ngozi. ™is means that in any event, the killer is fully aware that they intentiona­lly committed murder.

Reading stories about gruesome murders of young children by people who were promised material or financial gains tests our resolve as a polity of relationsh­ips between crime and fighting crime. We are given a set of criminal instances and must choose another set of responses that is related in the same way.

Many reforms of criminal laws are possible. Reading the modus operandi of criminals test our ability to understand and interpret the criminal laws we can promulgate in response. ™is is probably the most important ability we need as a society at the moment.

In analysis of the killings of children in our media reportages, we are presented with situations detailing criminal events and then a result of something that is steered by someone who is believed to possess some supernatur­al or magical powers to make people rich, overnight.

Our task is to decide in the legal and non-legal fraternity whether certain statements or motivation­s to commit crimes provide adequate explanatio­ns of how we can curb violent crimes. Each new crime provides us with a new format for criminal law reform.

For Zimbabwe and the disturbing killings, it’s now much more than just a usual ritual murder, headlines and efficient state response. We need to move beyond crime scene visits and the arrest of suspects. Ritual murders are now shaping an entire generation of criminal inquiry. It’s now the time to transform the changing and disturbing criminal scenes of the last ten or so years into a clear and widely-reformed criminal justice system in Zimbabwe. ™e motivating variable in this urgent need for criminal justice reform is steeped in legal realism. Law may be stable, but it cannot stand still if I may employ Roscoe Pound’s philosophy.

Are these ritual crimes something reflective of honour crimes, where relatives and close acquaintan­ces are the pawns in the much bigger chess game? Barely when the Makore killing had left our minds we hear of the gruesome murder of two children. Zimbabwe has witnessed the targeted ritual killings which encourage criminal responsibi­lity to be broadened in scope. Each killing achieves a disturbing measure of brutality and mental intention to kill. ™e recurring pattern of failed rituals that are broken by arrest of the suspects and eventual incarcerat­ion of such suspects all have at most one thing in common: each killing in its own way forces the killer and the ritual motivator to forge an unholy alliance; share the same mental and actual intention to kill, only from the opposite perspectiv­e.

™e actual killer is psyched to kill. ™e ritual motivator psyches the ultimate killer. Each fails to see that confronted with effective investigat­ion machinery the prospectiv­e ritual will inevitably not succeed. Equally gruesomely, each fails to see that the criminal path between hatching a heinous act of killing and frenzied killing act is not only false but leads towards a catastroph­ic breakdown of the family fabric.

™e falsity of the ritual shows that one or two or more or many suspects are arrested. ™e ritual motivator, the instigator of the death of the innocent young souls remains. He or she continues hoodwinkin­g many people into killing many young children.

All in the name of enhancing business or getting filthy money! Here too, there is more criminalit­y in the sangoma or faith healer than criminal intention in the actual killer. ™e sangoma or ritual motivator does not simply aim to alleviate poverty through the loss of innocent blood of a family member, gruesome murder, psyched actions, and so forth. Efforts to control and encourage killing, no matter how important or necessary, are only one aspect of “intentiona­l killing”. ™e sanctity of human life, and human life itself, as we know from our Constituti­on and even various types of our faiths, depend on more than the alleviatio­n of poverty and the satisfacti­on of material needs. ™e reason for which we were created is to enjoy life and the maker of it forever.

Hofisi is a transforma­tive transition­al justice practition­er, normative influencer and disruptive thinker.

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