Justice at last as Zim court orders ZRP to pay $13,000 to Gogo Chinyerere, a victim of police brutality

A ZIMBABWEAN court has ordered the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) and Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister to pay more than $13 000 in damages to 64 year-old Gogo Lillian Chinyerere as compensation for the pain she suffered in 2016 after some ZRP officers assaulted her during an anti-government protest.

High Court Judge Justice Nicholas Mathonsi recently granted an order compelling ZRP Commissioner-General Godwin Matanga and Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister Cain Mathema to pay $13 500 in damages to Gogo Chinyerere for the pain and suffering she endured emanating from the assault and some injuries she sustained on 26 August 2016, when some armed riot police officers kicked her repeatedly with booted feet and struck her several times with truncheons, while sitting near a courthouse in Harare.

According to summons filed in the High Court by her lawyers Kudzayi Kadzere and David Hofisi of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, Gogo Chinyerere, who suffers from high blood pressure and is diabetic, suffered the ignominy of a brutal assault on her aging body in full view of the public and also suffered physical harm as well as harm to her dignity as she was humiliated in full view of the public.

The 64 year-old Gogo Chinyerere suffered injuries to her back and shoulder and was unable to proceed with her job as a tailor due to the injuries sustained and has since been relying on well-wishers for her sustenance.

In court, Matanga and Mathema, who were represented by lawyers from the Civil Division of the Attorney General’s Office, had denied the allegations levelled against ZRP officers and claimed that she had made the assault allegations in a bid to tarnish the image of ZRP.

But Justice Mathonsi ordered Matanga and Mathema to pay $13 500 to Gogo Chinyerere broken down as $5 000 for damages for pain and suffering, $5 000 being damages for contumelia (indignity), $2 500 being special damages for loss of income and $1 000 as damages for past and future medical expenses.

Source: Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights

Share this update

Liked what you read?

We have a lot more where that came from!
Join 36,000 subscribers who stay ahead of the pack.

Related Updates

Related Posts:

Categories

Categories

Authors

Author Dropdown List

Archives

Archives

Focus

All the Old News

If you’re into looking backwards, visit our archive of over 25,000 different documents from 2000-2013.