| Mini Bus
Driver Seeks Compensation From P/officer By
Perpetual Sichikwenkwe
A mini bus driver is demanding compensation from a
Woodlands Police officer who fractured his right foot.
Lamus Kunda of Mtendere house No. B 817 is asking Legal
Resources Foundation [LRF] to help him get compensation from the officer who used a short
baton when he was waiting for his charge at the Police station.
Facts of the matter are that Police Road Traffic officers
from Woodland Police Station had Kundas bus LK 371 impounded on allegations that
Kunda had contravened a road traffic regulation whilst on the road.
The bus was driven to Woodlands Police station where Kunda
was told to pay for his wrong.
Kunda informed the owner of the bus about the development
who advised him to pay part of the money he had earned for that day.
He was advised to wait up to about 17:00 hours. As Kunda
sat together with his colleagues who were facing similar charges, a male traffic police
officer, Chalwe, ordered the drivers to leave the office and wait elsewhere, Kunda was the
last person to leave and was hit by Chalwe using a short baton resulting in a fracture on
his right foot.
Upon realising that he had injured Kunda, Chalwe promised
he would negotiate with him for compensation for the injury but todate Chalwe had not done
so.
It is for this reason that Kunda sought intervention from
LRF.
LRF Mtendere paralegal James Lumbwe advised Kunda to go
back to the University Teaching Hospital where he was treated and get a comprehensive
medical report indicating the degree of injury to help LRF claim compensation on his
behalf.
LRF Opens Centre in Solwezi
By Delphine Hampande
GOVERNMENT has called upon the police service to act within
the law and stop perceiving the Legal Resources Foundation as an adversary but as a
watchdog over government human rights record.
North Western province deputy minister David Kambilumbilu
made the statement in Solwezi when he opened LRF offices last month.
Kambilumbilu urged all residents to encourage people
particularly those with legal problems to fully utilise the organisation regardless of
political affiliation or social calling.
"The need for Legal Aid in this country is enormous
and so LRF alone can not manage to meet the high demand from the public but through
co-ordination with stakeholders, especially those already established, LRF workload would
be lightened," he said.
The deputy minister has also advised the LRF not to
discriminate against anyone but to accord an audience to any person depending on the
nature of
their case adding that the protection of human rights is
the basis of any democratic country.
And LRF vice chairman John Sangwa said the aim of the
organisation was to keep everyone well informed by educating them in matters of human
rights in order to reduce cases of human rights abuse.
Sangwa said where people were enlightened about their human
rights very few would be abused but where they were ignorant, a lot of people take
abnormal situations as normal and eventually die with it, a situation he described as
unfair.
Man Illegally Detained For 12 Days
By Delphine Hampande
A Man who was unlawfully detained for 12 days at Ibex Hill
police station has commended the Legal Resources Foundation for assisting him.
The LRF has since sued Constable Kwesa who unlawfully
detained Peter Kaluyi of Lusakas Chawama compound last month.
Kaluyis brother Phinius told the LRF News that his
brother was on July 23, 2001 around 21:00 hours picked up by police after a man of Chinese
origin whom he was doing business with reported him to Ibex police for theft.
The issue is that Peter Kaluyi and a Lusaka based Chinese
man, a manufacturer of Cooking Oil, went into a business contract so that he could start
supplying him with the oil.
After some time, the Chinese man supplied Kaluyi with poor
quality oil which resulted in him not paying the K550, 000 owed to the Chinese because he
had not sold the oil and he also lost his K400,000 capital.
It was at this point that the Chinese decided to report
Kaluyi to Ibex Police station where Constable Kwesa detained him for 12 days without being
given a warn and caution statement.
But when LRF intervened, Kaluyi was released on bond
immediately.
LRF Chawama advise centre paralegal Ernest Mukelabai said
it was a pity that police have concentrated on debt recovery than combating crime that was
on the increase.
Mukelabai has since advised them to leave the task of debt
recovery to courts as it best suits them.
Woman Burnt As a Form of Torture
By Madube Pasi Siyauya
A woman of Kinnerton Farm in Kalomo was in April this year
beaten and left to sleep near a fire that burnt her.
Sophia Siansalama, who reported the matter to Livingstone
LRF Advice office in July, said six men approached her at the farm and asked for
Siansalamas farm. She told them that was the place.
The men told Sophia that they were from the Ministry of
Agriculture and were conducting inspections on the farm. The men later told her that they
wanted to see Dorica. She told them that there was no one by that name.
The men insisted that she was Dorica and they accused her
of being a witch who bewitched Sibwenjilos son. The men apprehended her and took her
to Sibwenjilos village were they handcuffed her and beat her up while they poured
water on her body. The witch finder Zyalangana was among the group.
A message was sent to Sophias village while four men
guarded her in the night near a fire that burnt her right leg.
The following day, she was taken to Kalomo General Hospital
where she managed to report to the police who arrested the four men.
The police assured her that they would arrest the remaining
four men. On May 10, 2001 the accused did not appear in court and the matter was adjourned
to May 17. On the 17th the matter did not take off again because one of them was
hospitalised. It was adjourned to July 22 where it did not take off again because civil
servants were on strike.
Sophia reported the matter to LRF to assist her transfer
the case to Livingstone. LRF paralegal Patricia Mundia Phiri advised her to have the
matter in Kalomo since the civil servants had resumed work.
Widow Asked To Pay Cleansing Fee
By Perpetual Sichikwenkwe
A Lusaka widow has complained to Legal Resources Foundation
[LRF] that her late husbands relatives are demanding that she pays K250, 000 if she
wants to be cleansed.
Rosemary Chilukutu of Chilenje South told LRF paralegal
Beatrice Ngoma that her husbands relatives demanded the money when they were
reminded to cleansing her as the final ceremony after her late husbands funeral.
Rosemary failed to raise the said amount and instead
decided to take her late husband s family to court. She won the case.
The Local Court directed the relatives of Rosemarys
late husband to cleanse her within fourteen days without charging her for anything.
Todate the widow has not been cleansed and the relatives to
her late husband are at large but Rosemary insists that she be cleansed according to her
Lala tradition.
Rosemary also said she wants to recover the property that
was grabbed from her by the administrator whom she did not approve of.
Facts of the matter were that, in 1985, she contracted a
customary marriage with Dauti Mandefu.
She brought in one child from outside wedlock and Mandefu
had three children outside wedlock.
The duo did not have any off-spring during their marriage.
Madenfu was working for Lusaka City Council until when he
retired shortly before he dead intestate.
An administrator, a brother to the deceased, was appointed
without the widows consent.
Rosemary sued the alleged administrator for revocation and
it was done.
The widow and the deceaseds son Victor were appointed
to administer the estate. Victor got hold of the order of appointment and never gave a
copy to the widow.
She complained that the household property that the
deceased left had been packed up in the bedroom since the burial date of the deceased.
The alleged administrator grabbed the property from the
widow with a claim that the widow never had any child with the deceased.
The goods were taken to Livingstone where he lives.
Rosemary has appealed to the foundation to help her be
cleansed and get back the property from Livingstone.
Masiye Motel Refuses To Pay Worker Benefits
By Monica Kunda
An employee of Masiye motel has complained to the LRF that
she has not been paid her benefits for eight years.
Mary Chilufya said her employers have refused to pay her
what she worked for since 1993.
She explained that there were some shortages at Emmasdale
Masiye Motel and as a manager to all Masiye motels, she was asked to account for it.
The matter was reported to the labour office who wrote
several letters to the management of the company that the woman should get her benefits.
She reported the matter to Matero police but no investigations were conducted. Thereafter
she was forced to go on leave pending the case. Later, she received a letter that she
should vacate the company house.
After seeing that things were getting worse she decided to
lodge the complaint to Matero Legal Advice Centre.
Matero paralegal officer Mabvuto Banda wrote a letter to
Masiye management to inquire on the matter. The management confirmed that they had
terminated her employment and attached a statement showing her terminal benefits and
agreed to pay her in three instalments. The first instalment was supposed to start on
April 4.
Later the management refused to pay her terminal benefits
claiming that she had a case to answer over the company shortages.
Banda said according to the employment Act when a person is
on leave she is entitled to three Months full pay and half salary upon the extension of
another three months.
Lilayi P/Officer Assaults UNZA Student
By Delphine Hampande
POLICE officers have been accused of being scared of taking
legal action against their fellow officers found guilty of an offence for fear of
victimisation.
The officers are said to be shielding the officers found
breaking the law by detaining them temporarily and later releasing them without either
opening dockets for them or following up the case.
The Legal Resources Foundation has since challenged the
police service to fish out all officers operating unprofessionally because the few that
were doing so were denting the image of the organisation.
This was revealed in a case in which Sergeant Chiti based
at Lilayi Police camp assaulted Silumau Chirwa, a University of Zambia student on June 17
this year, after accusing him of inciting his friends to beat some police officers during
a match played at Lilayi Police college between UNZA and Lilayi police.
Silumau said the fight started when a player from Lilayi
got hurt in the game and this brought confusion but was sorted out immediately. Lilayi was
leading.
He said when the students equalised, they started
celebrating running about in the pitch and after a few minutes, he just saw Chiti grabbing
him by his shirt and punching him saying that students were becoming stupid just because
they won the match.
Silumau sustained eye injuries.
And according to the medical report obtained by the LRF
News, Silumau sustained a deep cut on both his eye and cheek.
He said Sergeant Chiti was later apprehended by UNZA
security men and later took him to Chelstone police station where he was detained briefly
and later released the same day.
Silumau complained that from that time he had been trying
to chase up the issue to make the sergeant compensate him for assault to no avail.
Kaunda Square Legal Advice Centre paralegal Adrophine
Bubala is handling the case.
IDASA Impressed With LRF
By Madube Pasi Siyauya
The Legal Resources Foundation (LRF)s rapid expansion
programme has been described as dramatic by a consultant from an organisation called
IDASA.
Derrick Marco who was in the country on institutional
tutoring to LRF last month said in its quest to achieve its goal, LRF has made it possible
for very citizen to have access to Law and get justice in abuses of human rights for the
people in the rural areas and compounds.
He said the organisation was going through a challenging
time to achieve its objectives with limited resources at their disposal.
He said he was particularly impressed with the commitment
of staff especially the paralegals that sit in tiny offices.
He said that the commitment of staff is an indication that
LRF would make it. He said he saw a lot of potential in LRF to utilise its national
capacity to implement additional challenges.
He said an organisation such as LRF is very important in a
country like Zambia, which is still undergoing development were people have no economic
power to access legal support.
LRF has so far reached seven out of the nine provinces in
Zambia.
Widow Wins Back House
By Madube Pasi Siyauya
Dorothy Sichone a widow with four children was assisted by
Legal Resources Foundation to obtain possession of a house that was bought by her late
husband Derrick Sichone.
Sichone was a lecturer at Kabwe Trades Training Institute
and died in May 2000.
Before he was allocated the house, it was occupied by a
retired senior lecturer Oswel Belt Mulenga who retired in 1993.
Mulenga thought that he was entitled to purchase of the
house under the presidential directive on the sale of government pool houses.
LRF commenced action for possession of the house on behalf
of the widow. The order was granted by Justice Tamula Kakusa on May 4, 2001. Sichone took
possession of the house July 13, 2001 after LRF issued a writ of possession.
Mulenga had to be evicted from the house. |