Mphoko wants death penalty for graft

Source: Mphoko wants death penalty for graft – DailyNews Live

Tendai Kamhungira  18 July 2017

HARARE – Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko has called for sweeping law
reforms which impose stiffer penalties such as cutting hands and shooting
people tried and found guilty of corruption.

Mphoko’s calls are at odds with his colleague – Vice President Emmerson
Mnangagwa who has publicly said he is against death penalty – a position
which stems from his personal experience during the war which saw him
avoiding the noose due to young age.

Zimbabwean laws currently impose capital punishment on people who would
have been found of guilty of committing aggravated murder.

Mphoko told State media last weekend that Zimbabwe must wage war on
deep-seated corruption by introducing stiffer penalties and methods such
as those used by the Chinese and Muslims.

“I wish we were like the Chinese or the Muslims who say if you steal, they
will cut your hand off; the Chinese would take you to the firing squad
straight away.

“But here, people have no feelings for other people. The solution we keep
on talking and have stiff penalties,” said Mphoko.

“But stiff penalties also are questionable because if you are taken to
prison, especially when there is politics of poverty, everybody is
accessible to be bought.

“Stiff penalty? You take a man to prison and in the prison, he lives like
a king because he has money,” he added.

Since assuming office four years ago, Chinese President Xi Jinping has
waged war on corruption, with dozens of senior people jailed, including
Zhou Yongkang, who was once China’s powerful domestic security chief,
given a life sentence for corruption last year.

Human rights law expert Dzimbabwe Chimbga said that under current
Zimbabwean laws, it was not possible to impose capital punishment for
corruption.

“Legally, it is not possible to impose capital punishment, which is the
death penalty, because Section 48 of the Constitution now limits
imposition of the capital punishment to only persons who have committed
murder under aggravated circumstances.

“And even then, the capital punishment may not be imposed on a woman or
anyone below the age of 21 or above the age of 70 at the time the offence
was committed,” Chimbga said.

For bribery, one may be convicted for a period of up to 20 years and for
criminal abuse of office, for a period of up to 15 years, in terms of the
Criminal Code. Critics and the opposition accuse President Robert Mugabe
of failing to tackle high-level graft and say endemic corruption is one
reason foreign companies are hesitant to invest in the country.

Mugabe has at times admitted to corruption among his Cabinet ministers but
says police lack the evidence to prosecute.

Harare lawyer Obert Gutu said that the maximum sentence for corruption is
not well defined in the country’s statutes, but agreed with Mphoko that
the law was too lenient in punishing offenders.

“In fact, there are yawning gaps in as far as what level of sentence,
exactly, should be imposed on corruption offenders. I definitely agree
with . . . Mphoko that we are too lenient when it comes to sentencing
corruption offenders and consequently, there is not enough incentive for
Zimbabweans not to indulge in acts deemed as corruption.

“In the same breath, I am unable to agree that we should impose the
capital sentence on corruption offenders as is the case in countries such
as China.

“At any rate, the Constitution of Zimbabwe outlaws the imposition of the
death sentence on corruption offenders. My take is that our courts should
be ruthless when they sentence corruption offenders. It might sound
draconian but I humbly submit that high-level corruption offenders should
be sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labour,” Gutu told the Daily
News.

A Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) revenue performance report for the
first half of 2017 released last week by chairperson Willia Bonyongwe
bemoaned runaway corruption in the country.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 2
  • comment-avatar
    executioner 7 years ago

    That would be a good idea. Who goes first

  • comment-avatar

    Careful now….as most of the current crop at the top, would be cleared out.