THE ZIMBABWE PEACE PROJECT At the time of writing this report, Joanna Mamombe, an MDC Alliance youth leader and Member of Parliament is in prison. She and two others, Cecilia Chimbiri and Netsai Marova were abducted and tortured by suspected state security agents in May 2020 after being arrested for leading a flash protest against hunger in Warren Park. Following this, the three were then charged with ‘faking their own abduction’ This is despite the existence of a strong footprint of state security agents in their arrest, abduction and torture. Following the horror incident, Mamombe was admitted in hospital, suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, rendering her unable to attend a court hearing. But the State, through Harare magistrate Bianca Makwande, decided to remand Mamombe in custody for two weeks pending examination of her mental health by two government doctors. Mamombe joins part of the growing number of political and human rights activists who are victims of the capture of the judiciary by the ruling party. PERSECUTED: Mamombe gets into a prison truck as she is being taken to Chikurubi on September 24 These include MDC Alliance deputy chairperson Job Sikhala who was released from Chikurubi Maximum Security Prison after weeks of pre-trial detention and his bail bid being frustrated several times. Sikhala’s ordeal is similar to that of journalist Hopewell Chin’ono, Transform Zimbabwe leader Jacob Ngarivhume, and MDC Alliance youth leader Godfrey Kurauone. The four, who have all be charged with inciting violence, spent up to, between 30 and 45 days each in prison, and their ordeal, which includes ill-treatment, being transferred to the maximum section of the prison, delays in bail hearings and judgement, all point to a judiciary that has become a weapon to silence dissent.

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