Kazembe, Ziyambi and Mthuli Sued For Illegally Hiking COVID-19 Violation Fines
18 February 2021
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By A Correspondent – Zimbabwe Human Rights Association (ZimRights) and an independent lawyer, have dragged the Justice Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi, Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube, and Home Affairs Minister Kazembe Kazembe, for illegally hiking COVID-19 violation fines.

ZIMRIGHTS and human rights lawyer, Sheila Jarvis, on Wednesday filed an urgent chamber application at Harare High Court seeking an order to stop the government from implementing or enforcing the outrageous new deposit fines which the three ministers recently purported to have authorised.

In an urgent chamber application filed by Tonderai Bhatasara of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, human rights lawyer Sheila Jarvis and ZimRights argued that government had erred by purporting to approve increases in deposit fines which police officers manning checkpoints and roadblocks have already begun to implement.

Through the three ministers and the Parliament of Zimbabwe, Government gazetted Statutory Instrument (SI) 25/2021 in an Extraordinary Gazette published on Monday 25 January 2021, which had the effect of increasing all deposit fines.

Jarvis and ZimRights said the enforcement of SI 25/2021 is a legal nullity and contravenes their right to equality and non-discrimination enshrined in section 56 of the Constitution.

The human rights lawyer and the human rights organisation said given the massive increases in the fines compared to the income levels of the general population, there is a reasonable apprehension of irreparable harm that will be caused to many offenders who would fail to pay the increased fines yet eventually SI 25/2021 would be set aside.

Jarvis and ZimRights contended that the law requires the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs to get Parliament’s approval before increasing deposit fines levels.

SI 25/2021, Jarvis and ZimRights argued, is invalid in that it was not made in accordance with section 280(6) of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform Act), which says “A statutory instrument may not be made in terms of subsection (5) unless a draft has been laid before and approved by resolution of Parliament.

The human rights lawyer and ZimRights stated that with no swipe machines or ticket-books at roadblocks plus little cash available, amid the obtaining economic challenges, there is a real risk of higher fines causing real hardship and corruption.

“ We want Ziyambi, Mthuli Ncube, Kazembe and Parliament, their subordinates and any other person acting under their control or on their behalf to be interdicted from implementing or enforcing the deposit fines purportedly authorised by SI 25 of 2021,” Jarvis and ZimRights said.