HIGH COURT WRONGLY ABSOLVES PRESIDENT MNANGAGWA IN POST-ELECTION SHOOTINGS



Honourable Justice David Mangota

This blogpost explores the ruling by Justice Mangota concerning President Emmerson Mnangagwa's appointment of a commission of inquiry to investigate the post-election violence of 1 August 2018. It highlights the limits of presuming human and governmental compliance with legal strictures and the attendant pitfalls of using law as a basis for factual claims. 

1. THE APPLICATION

The sister to one of the victims of the shootings on 1 August 2018 approached the High Court together with a non-governmental organization, the Counselling Services Unit. They challenged the decision by the President to appoint a commission of inquiry without cabinet consultation as required by sections 88(2) and 110(6) of the Constitution. They had a myriad of other reasons for approaching the court. They asserted that the President was conflicted as the military’s deploying authority, thus undermining his ability to appoint a commission to investigation his own alleged actions. They claimed that the failure to report the deployment to parliament was contrary to section 214 of the Constitution. They also argued against the appointment of Professors Charity Manyeruke and Lovemore Madhuku due to their alleged pro-government bias.

2. ORDER SOUGHT

The two applicants asked the High Court to set aside the decision to establish the commission of inquiry and instead, instruct the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC) or the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission (NPRC) to conduct the investigations or appoint the commission of inquiry. They also asked that the ZHRC or the NPRC formulate the commission’s terms of reference, whilst insisting that their own terms of reference replace those of the commission. Further, they sought the removal of Professors Charity Manyeruke and Lovemore Madhuku from the commission.

President Mnangagwa with Commissioners Manyeruke and Madhuku 
3. RESPONSE

The government lawyers raised a preliminary point. They drew attention to the distinction between the decision to constitute the commission and the legal process for its establishment. The application only impugned the decision to establish the commission and not the legal actions for its creation. According to the government lawyers, this meant the commission retained its legal status which remained unchallenged. In fact, they argued that the founding affidavit had been commissioned prior to the establishment of the commission, rendering the application premature. 

They also raised substantive arguments. They asserted that the President is exempt from consulting cabinet when making appointments required by legislation in accordance with section 110(2)(d) of the Constitution. They maintained that the President was not conflicted since the commission’s terms of reference went beyond the single issue of deployment of troops. They also argued that there was no basis in law for the ZHRC or the NPRC to appoint a commission of inquiry or act as such.

4. RULING

Justice David Mangota agreed with the government’s lawyers and ruled that the President's decision cannot be impugned without addressing the process which cloaked the decision with legality. The ruling is closely related to the case in which Romeo Zibani sought to stop the holding of interviews for a new Chief Justice because of the executive’s intention to amend the Constitution. The Supreme Court ruled that mere intention is insufficient basis for ignoring constitutional imperatives. Similarly, the intention of the President to set up a commission is insufficient basis to claim constitutional abrogation. At worst, it could amount to an intention to abrogate. This approximates to the general principle of criminal law that intention alone is insufficient in securing conviction. Thus, the failure to address the legal actions pursuant to the President’s intention rendered the application inadequate for the relief sought.  

5. STATEMENTS AFTER RULING

Having upheld the preliminary point, Justice Mangota proceeded to “sing with applicants on the constitutionality or otherwise of the first respondent’s conduct” for “academic purposes.” In this part of the judgment, he ruled that the President’s actions were constitutionally valid because appointments to commissions of inquiry are exempt from cabinet consultation under section 110(2)(d) of the Constitution. The Court restated that there is no legal basis for the ZHRC or NPRC to appoint a commission of inquiry or act as such, something which the applicants had since conceded. The Court also found that there was no evidence of the alleged bias of Professors Madhuku and Manyeruke, arguing that Professor Madhuku’s participation in the 2018 elections was evidence of his opposition to rather, than common purpose with, the current government.  

Downtown Harare, 1 August 2018

6. PRESIDENT’S INVOLVEMENT IN THE 1 AUGUST SHOOTINGS

In a dramatic twist, Justice Mangota then absolved President Mnangagwa of any wrongdoing in the tragic events of 1 August 2018. He ruled that the President was not involved in the deployment of troops and was therefore not conflicted in his appointment of the commission of inquiry. The honourable judge based his reasoning on the media report of Obey Manayiti published in the Newsday of 2 August 2018. The report was attached to the application as an annexure. It referred to a statement by the police indicating that the Commissioner General of Police had, on 1 August 2018, invoked section 37(1) of the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) to request for assistance from the defence forces. That section of POSA allows the Minister of Home Affairs to request the Minister responsible for defence to authorize the defence forces to assist the police. On that basis, Justice Mangota concluded that the Minister of Home Affairs had “…in turn, approached his counterpart in the Ministry of Defence” and “he (the Minister of Defence) in turn, dispatched members of the defence forces…”

Vice President Chiwenga and President Mnangagwa

This finding is extraordinary in several ways. It is accepted that courts can take judicial notice of a notorious fact or assert a claim averred which is not in dispute. However, this is markedly different from making a highly controvertible finding of fact against an individual who is not before the court based on a media report. Without any witness testimony or reference to an averment from the parties, the judge used a media report to extrapolate findings of fact from provisions of law. This is breathtaking, even more since it was done using the same non sequitur which the judge would go on to deplore: “The above stated matters expose the incorrectness of the applicants’ syllogism. They proceeded on the premise that, because the constitution confers power on the President to deploy, he deployed members of the defence forces on 1 August, 2018. The correct position is that he did not.” 


This is the same syllogism used to counter the one advanced by the applicants. They share the presumption of governmental action in accordance with law, and mistakenly deduce factual claims from legal provisions. As correctly noted by the honourable judge, the law is a poor indicator of human behaviour and is hardly a basis for making findings of fact. Only a slight alteration to the wording of Justice Mangota’s dictum is needed to capture the dissonance immanent in his reasoning. He “proceeded on the premise that, because POSA confers power on the Minister of Defence to deploy, he deployed members of the defence forces on 1 August, 2018.” The correct position is that we do not know. The testimony by the Commander of the Defence Forces (CDF) before the commission of inquiry casts further doubt over this finding of the court. The CDF indicated that the Vice President had written to the President in respect of the demonstrations on 1 August 2018, but he is not aware of the response from the President if any.  

Commission of Inquiry into the Post-Election Violence during one of its hearings

7. CONCLUSION

The ruling was delivered when the commission of inquiry was already conducting  its investigations. The chairperson of the commission had to play down the effect of the ruling on the commission’s work whilst the main opposition called for the arrest of Vice President Constantino Chiwenga who was, at the material time, the officer responsible for the Ministry of Defence. There is little doubt that the ruling has been disruptive.  This is highly undesirable, especially to the extent that it undercuts the work of the commission. Since the preliminary point had already been upheld, there was hardly any need to engage in an “academic exercise” which delves into matters for which an independent commission of inquiry was constituted. In so doing, the Court exonerated the President whilst effectively indicting an individual without affording them the right to be heard. This creates the impression of a judiciary which is fervent in its desire to absolve the President of any wrong doing, even in the absence of compelling evidence and ahead of independently established investigatory processes.  

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