Zimbabwe Situation

Hike spot fines: Chihuri

Source: Hike spot fines: Chihuri – DailyNews Live

Blessings Mashaya      24 February 2017

HARARE – Government must steeply hike spot fines to make them more
punitive to stem road crime and carnage, police commissioner-general
Augustine Chihuri said yesterday.

The police chief told the parliamentary portfolio committee on Transport
and Infrastructural Development – which was touring the law enforcement
agency’s transport management and computerisation centre at Chikurubi –
that legislators should push for steep fines for traffic violations,
including drunken driving; measures he claimed would introduce discipline
on some of the country’s most dangerous roads.

“The fines are such that once you pay, you forget it. Take for example in
Germany, if you commit an offence, they take all your number plates and
for you to get one plate (back), you need to fork out $10 000, which is
$20 000 for the two,” Chihuri told the lawmakers.

“I think for us, the number of people who commit road offences will
continue to increase because of small fines. But with the new system, all
this will be a thing of the past.”

Chihuri claimed spot fines and spikes were lawful.

“Yes spikes are legal….spot fines are also legal. People forget that as
police, we need to be protected from criminals. Everyone sees our mistakes
because we work with people all the time,” he said.

In justifying stiffer penalties, Chihuri said last year alone, 36 police
officers were injured, with three of them getting killed after being hit
by motorists trying to escape arrest.

This comes after Chihuri, Home Affairs minister Ignatius Chombo and
Attorney-General, Prince Machaya, in November last year unanimously
conceded that it was unconstitutional for traffic police officers to
detain and demand payment of spot fines from motorists at roadblocks.

The trio made the concessions in response to a High Court application
filed by a Harare motorist, Andrew Makunura, who was ordered to pay a spot
fine for not having a radio listener’s licence, but went on to file a
constitutional challenge against payment of spot fines.

Chihuri’s sentiments came after Finance minister Patrick Chinamasa in the
2017 budget hiked standard fines – which were last reviewed in February
2009 – by up to 100 percent with effect from January 1.

Chinamasa, like Chihuri, also argued that the penalty structure had been
found to be ineffective, given the rising road fatalities that were
largely attributed to the failure by motorists to observe road rules.

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