IS THE END OF ZAMBIA’S POLITICAL CRISIS IN SIGHT?
State releases incarcerated
opposition leader and commits to Commonwealth brokered dialogue
By Bruce
Chooma – Lusaka
Zambia’s
leading opposition figure Hakainde Hichilema and his co-accused walked to freedom
on Wednesday 16th August, 2017 after the state entered a nolle prosequi in the matter in which they were charged with
treason.
His
release came after the President of the United Party for National Development
(UPND) spent four months in maximum remand prison in conditions described as
dehumanizing. Zambia’s Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Lillian
Siyuni on Wednesday morning filed a ‘nolle prosequi’ in the case where
Hichilema and five others were supposed to stand trial. The accused party had
pleaded ‘not guilty’ to the charges.
A ‘nolle prosequi’ application is
an entry in the court record to the effect that the plaintiff or prosecutor
will not proceed. The decision to drop the charges had been reported earlier by
Reuters news agency citing anonymous government sources.
The
release of Hakainde popularly referred to as HH signals the commencement of the
end of a protracted political impasse that has resulted in heighted political
tension in the country following failure by the opposition to accept the
results of the August 2016 general elections. This was after their petition in
the Constitutional Court could not be heard and determined for want of time as
the 14 days stipulated by the constitution had elapsed.
The UPND leader was arrested in
April during a police raid on his home in the capital Lusaka. Hichilema was
said to have endangered the life of the president when his motorcade refused to
give way to a presidential convoy months back.
He, along with five others, was
charged with three offenses: treason, disobeying lawful orders and using
insulting language. The state prosecutor dropped the second charge whiles the
magistrate struck out the third citing incoherent and untruthful testimonies by
police officers.
His lawyers previously said the
case should not proceed to a high court because the officer who issued the
trial papers had no authority to do so. The UPND have maintained that the 2016 polls
were rigged in favour of President Edgar Lungu and the ruling Patriotic Front
(PF). They have however failed to overturn the results through the courts.
Whilst
HH was in prison, local and international pressure was mounting on the
government to drop his charges as failure by his motorcade to give way to
President Lungu’s motorcade could not have been cited as treason, yet it was
the basis for his brutal arrest together with his domestic workers.
President
Lungu proclaimed a Threatened State of Emergency which was upheld by parliament
whilst opposition members of parliament were absent in response to what he
described as acts of sabotage following the burning of the country’s biggest
market in the country’s capital Lusaka.
The
release of HH was brokered through sustained international intervention at its
climax the intervention by the COMMONWEALTH Secretary General Patricia Scotland
who held a series of talks with Zambia’s President Edgar Lungu and his rival
Hakainde Hichiilema a few days before his release. A few days before her visit
to Zambia, Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo held talks with
President Lungu and also with then incarcerated Hichilema after which he
declared that the gap between President Edgar Lungu and opposition leader
Hakainde Hichilema was narrowing.
General
Obasanjo who flew into Zambia with South Africa President Jacob Zuma committed
to ensure the political tension in Zambia was diffused. Zambian authorities had
strongly resisted international advice on the matter of the arrest and
detention of the opposition leader arguing that Zambia was a sovereign state.
One victim of this decision was Mmusi Maimane leader of the opposition
Democratic Alliance of South Africa who was forcefully deported at the airport
on arrival to attend the trial of Hakainde Hichilema in the Lusaka magistrate
court.
“I
see that the gap between the opposition leader Hakainde Hichilema and His
Excellency the President is narrowing and I think that we can move the country
forward and put the issues of 2016 behind us. As an elderly African statesman,
I remain fully committed to ensuring that peace and stability is in progress
and continue to exist, not just in Zambia but in all the 53 countries in Africa”,
General Obasanjo said.
Following
HH’s release, the Commonwealth’s Secretary General described Director of Public
Prosecutions Lillian Siyuni’s decision to enter a nolle prosequi in UPND leader
Hakainde Hichilema’s treason case as reasonable.
She
also announced that she had appointed Nigerian diplomat Professor Ibrahim
Gambari as her dialogue envoy for Zambia. Scotland stated that the opposition
leader’s release from prison was an opportunity for the country to move forward
in the interest of all Zambians, and to achieve political cohesion and
reconciliation through dialogue.
“The
DPP’s decision to issue a nolle prosequi in the case against Mr Hichilema is
reasonable and offers a unique opportunity for the country to move forward in
the interest of all Zambians, and to achieve political cohesion and
reconciliation through dialogue. The DPP, as a custodian of the public interest
and the rule of law, must have weighed what was in the interest of justice and
the public interest at this delicate point in Zambia’s history and decided
that, at this material time, it was not in the interest of the public to
prosecute the leader of the opposition, especially following the commitment to
peace and harmony generously given by both President Lungu and Mr Hichilema to
me during my recent visit to Zambia, and their pledge to engage in a
constructive, responsible and forward-looking dialogue.
She added that Hichilema’s release was an opportunity for Zambians and their leaders to show the world that the country still remains a symbol of peace and a beacon of stability, unity and political tolerance in Africa and the Commonwealth.” Scotland said.
She added that Hichilema’s release was an opportunity for Zambians and their leaders to show the world that the country still remains a symbol of peace and a beacon of stability, unity and political tolerance in Africa and the Commonwealth.” Scotland said.
Hakainde
declared on release that he was 1o times stronger and would not rest until all
the other party supporters who remain in detention across the country were
released.
UPND
legal counsel Jack Mwiimbu insisted that the right to be heard case the party
has before the courts will not be discontinued as they fight for their election
petition to be heard.
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