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ACTION URGENTE

 

ZIMBABWE 

 

7 May 2008

 

Arrest of

Harrison Nkomo

a leading human rights lawyer

because he told government attorney Michael Mugabe to tell "his father" to step down shortly before a May 2 court hearing.

 

UPDATE 09 05 08 : Nkomo was discharged from Harare's main Parirenyatwa Hospital  on 12 May after being rushed there while in custody because of high blood pressure.

He was released on bail and his next court appearance will be on May 23.

 

  Source  :  

HUMAN RIGHTS

WATCH

 

 

On 7 May 2008 at 2:30 p.m. on , Harrison Nkomo, a partner at Mtetwa & Nyambirai Legal Practitioners and   leading media lawyer,   was arrested near his office in central Harare and is being held at the Law and Order Section of Harare Central Police station. He faces the criminal charges of “insulting or undermining the authority of the head of state” under the Public Order and Security Act of 2002. Nkomo recently defended Barry Bearak, a New York Times correspondent arrested for working without accreditation on April 3, 2008 and held for four days before being deported. Human Rights Watch urged that Nkomo be immediately released and all politically motivated charges dropped. 

On 2nd May 2008 Nkomo was at the Harare High Court in Court ‘O’ waiting to appear before a Judge to argue bail applications for some detained HRDs he uttered the following words to one Michael Rutendo Mugabe (State Counsel): ‘Shamwari enda unoudza baba vako kuti vabve pachigaro, vatadza kutonga… tatambura muno munyika’ (my friend go and tell your father to step down from the throne, he has failed to rule, we are suffering in this country).

Nkomo is the first lawyer arrested for apparent opposition activities since the crackdown following the March 29 elections, although others have been harassed. Since the elections, the authorities have arrested more than 100 presiding electoral officers. On April 25, 2008, they arrested more than 200 people who had sought shelter from the government’s terror campaign at the headquarters of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in Harare. They were held for several days before being released without charge. 

Mr Nkomo was detained at Harare Central police station holding cells overnight. On 8th may he had to be rushed to Parirenyatwa hospital after he developed some medical problems.

 

UPDATE 09 05 08 : On 09 May , prosecutors charged Harrison Nkomo with "undermining the authority or insulting the president," in connection with allegations that he told government attorney Michael Mugabe to tell "his father" to step down shortly before a May 2 court hearing, defense lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa said.

On 9th May 2008, at Parirenyatwa hospital, he was remanded out of custody on ZWD5, 000,000,000 bail deposit with conditions that he report to the police once every week as well as surrender his travel documents.

He was released on bail and his next court appearance will be on May 23, Mtetwa said 

 

Background

 

Human rights lawyer Harrison Nkomo recently secured bail for two journalists, one of whom works for the MDC, which won the recent parliamentary elections. The journalists had been in custody since April 15, 2008 on charges of public violence after being picked up near a bus which burst into flames in Harare on the day the MDC organized a “stay-away” to demand that presidential elections results be announced. The Zimbabwe government claims the bus ignited because of an act of vandalism by the opposition, but independent observers suggest it was an electrical fault. While representing these clients, Nkomo allegedly told a staff member at the Attorney General’s Office, a nephew of Mugabe, that his uncle should leave office. The police are using this allegation to justify this politically motivated charge. The Public Order and Security Act of 2002 introduced a range of overbroad and vague criminal offenses that violate the right to free expression. The law criminalizes criticism of the president, whether his person or his office.

 

COPY THE ENCLOSED LETTER AND SEND IT TO THE ADDRESS PROVIDED..

 

Target adresses: 

 

Mr Robert Gabriel Mugabe, Office of the President, Munhumutapa Building, Samora Machel Avenue, Causeway, Harare Zimbabwe

 

Letter: 

Your Excellency,

I am deeply concerned following reports that Human rights Lawyer Harrison Nkomo was arrested..

On 7 May 2008 at 2:30 p.m. on , Harrison Nkomo was arrested near his office in central Harare and is being held at the Law and Order Section of Harare Central Police station. He faces the criminal charges of “insulting or undermining the authority of the head of state” under the Public Order and Security Act of 2002. Nkomo recently defended Barry Bearak, a New York Times correspondent arrested for working without accreditation on April 3, 2008 and held for four days before being deported.

 

I believe that Nkomo is arrested for apparent opposition activities, in particular his work to defend victims of human rights violations in Zimbabwe. I am concerned for the physical and psychological integrity of Dzimbabwe Chimbga and of all members of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights.

I urge the authorities in Zimbabwe to:

1. release  immediately Harrison Nkomo   and drop all charges politically motivated  .  ;

2. Guarantee the security and physical and psychological integrity of Harrison Nkomo;;

3. Ensure that all human rights defenders in Zimbabwe, including lawyers, carrying out their legitimate work in the defence of human rights, are able to operate free of restrictions and reprisals.

I respectfully remind you that the United Nations Declaration on the Right and Responsibility of Individuals Groups and Organs of Society to Promote and Protect Universally Recognized Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, adopted by consensus by the UN General Assembly on 9 December 1998, recognises the legitimacy of the activities of human rights defenders, their right to freedom of association and to carry out their activities without fear of reprisals.

I would particularly draw your attention to Article 11: “Everyone has the right, individually and in association with others, to the lawful exercise of his or her occupation or profession (...),” and to Article 12 (2): “The State shall take all necessary measures to ensure the protection by the competent authorities of everyone, individually and in association with others, against any violence, threat, retaliation, de facto or de jure adverse discrimination, pressure or any other arbitrary action as a consequence of his or her legitimate exercise of the rights referred to in the present Declaration.”

Yours sincerely,

 

TAKE ACTION NOW

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