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Showing posts with label Zavale Luciano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zavale Luciano. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2019

Reasonable grounds two Swaziland police officers killed suspect in custody, coroner reports

There were ‘reasonable grounds’ to believe two Swaziland police officers killed Luciano Zavale who had been arrested for allegedly having a stolen CD writer in his possession, a coroner has ruled.
 
Zavale, a 35-year-old Mozambican barber popularly known as Melusi, died at Manzini police station.

The coroner, former Hhohho Principal Magistrate Nondumiso Simelane, said in a report, ‘death was caused by the deprivation of air into the lungs (respiratory distress) through the outer orifices, being the mouth and nose’.

Simelane said, ‘I am satisfied that reasonable grounds do exist for suspecting that the death of Luciano Reginaldo Zavale was caused by the criminal act and/or culpable or negligent conduct of the two investigating constables, being 6432 D/Constable Nhlanhla Nkambule and 5709 D/Constable Ndumiso Myeni.’

Simelane referred the case to the director of public prosecutions to take such action as he deemed fit.

Zavale made international news after he died in police custody on 12 June 2015. Police took his body to the Raleigh Fitkin Memorial Hospital where they told nurses that he had been found by members of the public along the road at Coates Valley. 

Pathologist Dr Steve Naidoo told the inquest Zavale died after his breathing was obstructed externally through suspected smothering and his lungs, instead of drawing air, drew blood from nearby veins and filled up. 

He said Zavale had several injuries on his body, including a scraping at the back of his head, superficial abrasions on his arm, cheek, back, as well as internally, his neck and lungs.

See also

‘Police torture suspect to death’
More police torture in Swaziland

Thursday, 31 May 2018

HIGH COURT HEARS OF ‘POLICE TORTURE’

A former hotel supervisor told the Swaziland High Court police tortured her to try to make her confess to theft.

She said she was handcuffed, beaten, suffocated to near death, and threatened with hanging. She complained later to the local police commander but felt nothing was one about her complaint, so she went to court.

Phindile Mndzebele is claiming E750,000 (US$60,000) in damages from the Royal Eswatini [Swaziland] Police Service.

She told the High Court was she was the house-keeping manager at the Lugogo Sun hotel when a items and cash were reported stolen from a room. Police accused her of the theft and took her in a police vehicle to a forest up a mountain.

The Swazi Observer reported on Thursday (31 May 2018) that she denied being involved in the theft. Five officers were alleged to have forced her to sit on a grass mat and her hands were cuffed and she was suffocated three times. She was told the assault and suffocation would not stop until she soiled herself. One officer said she would hang if she did not give up the stolen items.

The ordeal ended when the police officers were called away to other duties.

The High Court was told doctors examined Mndzebele and found her muscles were swollen as a result of the assault on her back. She also had to attend daily counselling.

Reports of police torture are common in Swaziland. The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) in a report on Swaziland published in May 2018 stated the Swazi State, ‘continues to be either actively involved in, or turn a blind eye to, torture’. 

It added, ‘Reports of suspects dying in police custody, workers assaulted by state police, suspects shot and killed by the army, as well as suspected poachers tortured and killed by game rangers and private farm owners have come to characterize law enforcement in Swaziland.

‘Amnesty International reports that, in June 2015, a Mozambican national living in Swaziland, Luciano Reginaldo Zavale, died on the day he was arrested on allegations that he was in possession of a stolen laptop. In August 2015, independent forensic evidence indicated that he did not die of natural causes. An inquest was established to investigate the death, but its findings have never been made public. 

‘In February 2016 at the Kwaluseni campus of the University of Swaziland, a student of the University, Ayanda Mkhabela, was run over by an armoured police vehicle during a student protest and left paralysed. The Commissioner of Police publicly announced that he would institute an investigation within the police service. As at the end of 2017, no public investigation had been undertaken into the incident. The Commissioner of Police had not made public the findings of the internal investigation.’ 

The ICJ said there was generally no independent mechanism for investigating abuses committed by the police.

It added, ‘The students involved in the protest have instituted legal proceedings in respect of damages. The Government is defending the action.’

The ICJ added, ‘Recent situations paint a gloomy picture about the treatment of persons in custody. A former Member of Parliament, Charles Myeza, has added credence to the serious allegations of torture at Bhalekane Correctional Facility, revealing in court papers that officers also treated him in an inhumane way. Myeza, who was serving a custodial sentence at the facility, alleged that he was stripped naked, smacked on the buttocks and had his genitals squeezed by officers, in furtherance of a common purpose to violate his right to dignity. The former Member of Parliament is currently suing the Government.’

See also

ARMY CONFIRMS SHOOT-TO-KILL POLICY
ANOTHER FATAL SHOOTING BY RANGERS
https://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2018/01/another-fatal-shooting-by-rangers.html

Tuesday, 16 June 2015

MPs WANT INQUIRY INTO ‘POLICE KILLING’

Members of Parliament in Swaziland on Monday (15 June 2015) called for an inquiry into the death in police custody of the Mozambique national Luciano Zavale.

He was reportedly suffocated to death while being tortured by police.

Swazi Prime Minister Barnabas Dlamini is expected to make an official statement to parliament on the matter on Wednesday. A further report from the PM is expected in the coming week.

The Mozambican High Commissioner to Swaziland Luis Adelino da Silva has also called for answers from the police on how Zavale, popularly known as Melusi, died.

The People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO), the best known of the banned prodemocracy organisations in Swaziland, condemned the death as ‘cold blooded murder’.

It said in a statement, ‘These arbitrary killings have become commonplace in Swaziland because no action gets taken to bring the guilty to justice.’

See also

‘SWAZI POLICE ADMIT KILLING SUSPECT’
‘POLICE TORTURE SUSPECT TO DEATH’
http://swazimedia.blogspot.co.uk/2015/06/police-torture-suspect-to-death.html

Sunday, 14 June 2015

‘SWAZI POLICE ADMIT KILLING SUSPECT’

Swaziland police have admitted killing a man in their custody who they allegedly tortured, according to local media.

The 35-year-old Mozambican barber, Luciano Reginaldo Zavale, popularly known as Melusi, had reportedly been taken to Manzini police station to be questioned about a stolen CD writer.

The Observer Sunday newspaper reported (14 June 2015) that police were alleged to have made the admission to killing Melusi during a meeting with the deceased man’s parents and officials from the Association of Mozambicans in Manzini.

Police later denied making the admission. Swazi police Deputy Information and Communications Officer Inspector Phindile Vilakati told the newspaper, ‘We do take responsibility that he died in our premises but investigations are still ongoing to find out what really happened.’

Meanwhile, about 300 people demonstrated outside Manzini Police Station on Saturday and closed streets as they demanded answers to the circumstances of Melusi’s death.

Some people also went to Dups Funeral Home in an attempt to see Melusi’s body so they could examine the extent of his injuries, but they were denied entry.

National Commissioner of Police Isaac Magagula said he could neither deny nor confirm the allegations of torture, he said a post-mortem would be conducted to determine Melusi’s actual cause of death.

See also

‘POLICE TORTURE SUSPECT TO DEATH’