A HARARE magistrate yesterday dismissed an application for
refusal of remand filed by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Union (ZCTU)
president Peter Mtasa, secretary-general Japhet Moyo and #ThisFlag leader Evan
Mawarire. The three are accused of trying to subvert a constitutional
government following the January 14-16 protests against fuel price hikes.
Mtasa and Moyo, who are represented by Alec Muchadehama and
Mawarire by Tonderai Bhatasara had filed the application before magistrate
Rumbidzai Mugwagwa, saying the State was delaying their trial.
Prosecutor Sebastian Mutizirwa successfully asked for
postponement of the matter, saying the docket had been sent to the
Prosecutor-General’s Office for perusal.
But Bhatasara and Muchadehama told court that the State was
not ready for trial.
Muchadehama said other suspects who were arrested during
the same time with his clients had already been tried. He further told court
that the State should give his clients trial dates like it did when it
fast-tracked other public violence cases.
“The State said they need six weeks to complete the
investigations and now it is more than six weeks. There is only one exhibit
which is a video, but they are taking more than six weeks to investigate that
video. The State was stampeding us to try public violence matters after just 30
minutes of the arrest, but now they are refusing to try our clients within that
period,” Muchadehama said.
However, Mugwagwa dismissed the application, saying the
State had demonstrated to the court the progress they had made for the purpose
of coming up with a trial date.
The matter was postponed to April 16.
Allegations are that on January 1, 2019, Mtasa, while
working in connivance with Mawarire, recorded and published a video which went
viral on all social media platforms.
It is the State’s contention that the contents of the video
were meant to subvert a constitutionally elected government. The allegations
are that Mtasa and Mawarire were coercing Zimbabwean workers to boycott
reporting for duty and encouraging civil disobedience or resistance to the law.
Newsday
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