Case thrown out against 'tortured Zimbabwe abductees'

Zimbabwean human rights defenders are celebrating after the High Court threw out a case against two opposition politicians accused of fabricating a story about being abducted while in police custody and later tortured and sexually assaulted.

Case thrown out against 'tortured Zimbabwe abductees'

 The court said the state had failed to prove that MP Joana Mamombe and activist Cecilia Chimbiri, from the opposition Citizen’s Coalition for Change (CCC) party, had been lying.

They had been accused of tarnishing the image of the state. The case was being heard in the magistrate's court but the two appealed to the High Court to have the charges throw out. A third woman charged along with them went into exile.

The CCC had said their continued prosecution was an abuse of state institutions.

The two women, along with another youth activist, were first arrested in May 2020 for flouting Covid rules for taking part in a small street protest saying the lockdown was causing widespread hunger.

Ms Chimbiri told the BBC how they were taken from a police station by men in plain clothes and driven to a location about 80km (50 miles) north of the capital, Harare.

She said the three women were thrown into a pit and subjected to hours of beatings and sexual assault.

The alarm was raised when they went missing and the police initially confirmed their arrest, but retracted the statement.

The three were later dumped at night - well over 24 hours after their abduction - at the roadside on the outskirts of Bindura.

They were charged whilst in a private hospital where they were being treated for their injuries, days after they were found.

Source: BBC