2 Resist, Reject and Report Violence, #RRRV2023 Major Highlights On 16 December, the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs, Honourable Ziyambi, moved the third and final reading of the Private Voluntary Organisations (PVO) Amendment Bill [H. B. 10A, 22] at the National Assembly. The proposed amendment is posed to shrink civil society organisations' operating environment with provisions that allow unchecked interference on CSOs, their work and associated persons. The Bill, published in November 2021, restricts and suppresses the impactful work on advancing human rights, promoting public accountability and good governance in Zimbabwe. The Minister of Finance and Economic Development, Prof. Mthuli Ncube, estimated that grants would decrease from US$776 million in 2022 to US$352.8 million in 2023, a variance of US$423.2 million. Once signed into law, provisions in the proposed amendment allow unrestricted powers to arrest targeted persons, freeze funds, and deregister organisations alleged to be anti-establishment. On 14 December, Job Sikhala's wife was found guilty of reckless driving by Harare magistrate Evelyn Mashavakure. She was ordered to pay a ZWL$30,000.00 fine for the offence or face a two months jail term, submit her driver's licence in seven days and be banned from driving for six months. Evelyn was previously arrested at a police checkpoint on 20 September for not observing road rules while going to Chikurubi Maximum Security Prison to visit her husband, Job Sikhala. Her arrests appear to be politically motivated. Minor offences ordinarily attract a fine. Zengesa East Member of Parliament Honourable Job Sikhala was denied bail at the Harare Magistrates court on Friday, 30 December 2022. He was arrested on 14 June 2022 in connection with violent incidents in Nyatsime following the death of a CCC party member Moreblessing Ali who was discovered dismembered in a well. Honourable Sikhala is in detention for more than 200 days, with the State delaying his right to a fair trial. The continued and unjustified denial of bail violates many provisions of Section 50 of the Constitution, among them, states that a person who has been arrested must be released unconditionally or on reasonable conditions pending a charge or trial unless there are compelling reasons justifying their continued detention. December 2022 The Zimbabwe Peace Project Monthly Monitoring Report 2

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