State withdraws murder charges against three Glen View suspects

via State withdraws murder charges against three Glen View suspects | SW Radio Africa by Tichaona Sibanda on Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Three MDC-T activists, alleged to have played a part in the murder of police inspector Petros Mutedza in May, 2011, were on Monday set free after the state decided to withdraw charges against them.

Two of the three suspects Jackson Mabota and Tarisai Kusotera, both MDC-T youth members in Glen View, were arrested one and half years after Mutedza’s death. The third suspect, Chenjerai Douglas Muchinenyika, was picked up in May 2013, two years after the alleged murder.

Defence lawyer Gift Mtisi said the state withdrew charges against the trio following their application last week Friday for refusal of further remand. Mtisi said the state had failed to find any incriminating evidence against Mabota, Kusotera and Muchinenyika.

Originally 30 MDC-T activists were arrested a few days after the murder, during disturbances in Glen View. After spending almost two years in police custody, twenty-one of the activists were acquitted by High Court judge Justice Chinembiri Bhunu in 2013 for lack of evidence.

However, seven of them still face charges after Justice Bhunu ruled that the State had proved a prima facie case against them. Of the seven, four were granted bail late last year. The remaining three, Last Maengahama, Tungamirai Madzokere and Yvonne Musarurwa, who were all incarcerated at Chikurubi, were granted bail in January this year.

An elated Mabota told SW Radio Africa that he was glad he was a free man at last and castigated the police for going on a fishing expedition when they arrested him and other activists.

‘I knew I was innocent all along. I knew that I hadn’t done what they accused me of doing. We realized after we were arrested that the police had a list of all prominent Glen View MDC-T activists and wondered which direction the investigation was leading to, as the arrests no longer had anything to do with the murder but political affiliation,’ Mabota said.

He added that he was hopeful the trial of the remaining seven members will produce a similar outcome as some of the accused were nowhere near the scene of the crime on the day in question. The trial resumes on the 24th March.

‘A person like Maengahama, he was in church as he does every Sunday when the incident happened. They are so many witnesses who can place him there and not the crime scene,’ Mabota said.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 4
  • comment-avatar
    Sekuru Mapenga 10 years ago

    TWO YEARS in police custody… twenty-one of the activists were acquitted …. for lack of evidence.
    the arrests no longer had anything to do with the murder but political affiliation

    justice mugabe style

  • comment-avatar
    masvukupete 10 years ago

    Aint it possible to sue the state for or wrongful arrest. Some of said it at the start of the trial “even a child could have seen the holes in the state’s case.” A real magistrate (as an independent arm) would have thrown this case out a long time ago. This is the reason we need autonomous arms of the state (in theory) with no due influence from the other arms. Our justice system interprets the law according to the political intentions instead of the actual laws. The bench should interpret the law as it is and not amend the law according to their own political liking. It is the job of the politicians to make, and amend laws. The bench cannot decide on what the politicians intended to say. if there are coma, or spelling mistakes the bench should refer the laws back to the politicians to make the necessary corrections. (aka Jealous Mawarire vs State).

  • comment-avatar
    munzwa 10 years ago

    sickening to think this is the justice system we all live in!!These judges and magistrates must be confident in the preservation of the present system and Govt!!!!be very careful of any window of anarchy..

  • comment-avatar

    Our justice is stuffed with cowards who cannot stick to what their profession demands. They are easily arm twisted by those with political influence. The police are now the judges.