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COURT WATCH 03-2019 Criminal Abuse of Office 12 February 2019

The document discusses the crime of criminal abuse of office as defined in Zimbabwean law. It notes that several former government officials have recently been charged with this crime. The crime involves a public officer intentionally acting contrary to or failing to carry out their official duties in order to favor or disfavor someone. However, the law seems to broadly encompass even honest mistakes. The document argues that [1] the crime should not apply to genuine mistakes and [2] should require a corrupt motive such as intending an undue or illegal favor. Limiting the broad scope of the law in this way is necessary to uphold the rule of law and prevent selective or unfair prosecution.

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Jacob Sibanda
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
38 views3 pages

COURT WATCH 03-2019 Criminal Abuse of Office 12 February 2019

The document discusses the crime of criminal abuse of office as defined in Zimbabwean law. It notes that several former government officials have recently been charged with this crime. The crime involves a public officer intentionally acting contrary to or failing to carry out their official duties in order to favor or disfavor someone. However, the law seems to broadly encompass even honest mistakes. The document argues that [1] the crime should not apply to genuine mistakes and [2] should require a corrupt motive such as intending an undue or illegal favor. Limiting the broad scope of the law in this way is necessary to uphold the rule of law and prevent selective or unfair prosecution.

Uploaded by

Jacob Sibanda
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Court Watch 3/2019 Criminal Abuse of Office 12 February 2019

COURT WATCH 3/2019


[12th February January 2019]
Criminal Abuse of Office – What is it?

Former Ministers, civil servants and judicial officers have come in a small sad
procession before the courts, almost all of them charged with criminal abuse
of office.  The President has promised zero tolerance of corruption so we may
expect the procession to become a flood in the months to come.  Criminal
abuse of office seems to be the favourite crime for prosecutors to charge in
these cases, so it is pertinent to ask what exactly the crime is and what are its
limits.
Definition of the Crime
Criminal abuse of office – or criminal abuse of duty as a public officer, to give
the crime its proper name – is defined in section 174(1) of the Criminal Law
Code as follows:
“If a public officer, in the exercise of his or her functions as such,
intentionally—
(a) does anything that is contrary to or inconsistent with his or her duty
as a public officer;  or
(b) omits to do anything which it is his or her duty as a public officer to
do;
for the purpose of showing favour or disfavour to any person, he or she
shall be guilty of criminal abuse of duty as a public officer …”
The section goes on say that anyone found guilty of the crime is liable to be
sentenced a fine of up to $3 000 or to prison for up to 15 years.
So a person is guilty of the crime if:
 he or she is a public officer [i.e. a Vice-President, Minister or deputy
Minister, a member of a parastatal or local authority, a judicial officer or an
employee of the State, a parastatal or a local authority], and
 he or she does something that is inconsistent with his or her official duty,
or fails to carry out an official duty, for the purpose of giving an advantage
or benefit to someone else or of prejudicing someone else.
Scope of the Crime
The crime seems very broad in its scope – impossibly broad, in fact.  On the
one hand it would cover a case where a Minister flouts proper procedures
and orders his subordinates to award a government contract to a company of
which he, the Minister, is the main shareholder.  On the other hand it also
seems to cover the case of a magistrate who, out of a mistaken view of the
law or the evidence, wrongly acquits an accused person.  In the first case the
Minister is using his official position to enrich his company at the public’s
Court Watch 3/2019 Criminal Abuse of Office 12 February 2019

expense;  it is only right that he should be brought before a criminal court and
punished.  But in the second case the magistrate has made a genuine
mistake, something that even magistrates do sometimes:  surely it would be
wrong to bring him before a criminal court because of his mistake?
Although there is nothing in the wording of section 174 to say that magistrates
must not be prosecuted for making honest mistakes, Parliament cannot have
intended the section to cover them:
 If magistrates faced prosecution for making mistakes their judicial
independence, guaranteed by section 164 of the Constitution, would be
undermined.  In criminal cases they might be inclined to convict accused
persons for fear of being prosecuted if they acquit them.
 As the Chief Justice has pointed out recently, the law gives remedies such
as appeal and review to parties who are aggrieved by magistrates’
decisions;  these remedies are quite adequate and do not have to be
strengthened by sending erring magistrates to gaol, or fining them.
Why There Must be Limits to the Crime
We have used the example of magistrates making mistakes because they
illustrate very clearly that there must be some limits to the apparently wide
scope of section 174.  Apart from the absurdity of interpreting the section so
that it criminalises honest mistakes, there are two additional but related
reasons why the section must be given a limited interpretation:
 The rule of law demands that crimes must be clearly and strictly defined,
so that people know precisely what they can and cannot do.
 The more vaguely a crime is defined the more scope there is for selective
prosecution, that is for prosecutors to decide to prosecute in some cases
but not in others.  Enforcement of the law will then depend on the whim of
a prosecutor rather than on the letter of the law:  we then have the rule of
power, not the rule of law.
In short, the rule of law demands that clear limits be put on all crimes.
What are the Limits of the Crime
Genuine mistakes should not be criminalised
First of all, the crime should not extend to honest mistakes, whether made by
magistrates or by any other public officers.  Everyone can make mistakes,
and so long as the mistakes are genuine they should not be visited with
criminal penalties.
A court could read this limitation into section 174(1) very simply by construing
paragraphs (a) and (b) as implying that they require knowledge on the part of
a public officer that his or her conduct is illegal.  According to this
interpretation public officers would commit the crime if they:
(a) do anything which they know is contrary to their duty, or
(b) omit to do anything which they know it is their duty to do.
Court Watch 3/2019 Criminal Abuse of Office 12 February 2019

In other words, the section should be interpreted so that public officers do not
commit the crime of abuse of office unless they know their conduct is illegal.
Corrupt motive
Another limitation is suggested by the fact that section 174 is contained in
Chapter IX of the Criminal Law Code, which is headed “Bribery and
Corruption” and deals with crimes such as bribery, corruptly passing off false
documents, and so on.  To fit in with the other crimes in Chapter IX, the crime
of abuse of office should carry some element of corruption.  This suggests
that to commit the crime, a public officer must intend to achieve an improper
or illegal result.
A court could read this limitation into section 174(1) by construing the words
“favour or disfavour” as meaning “undue or illegal favour or disfavour”.  On
this interpretation, a public officer would commit the crime if he or she did
something or omitted to do something in order to confer an undue or illegal
benefit on a person or to prejudice a person unfairly or illegally.
Conclusion
To sum up, we suggest that section 174 of the Criminal Law Code should be
interpreted to mean that public officers commit the crime of abuse of public
office if:
(a) they do anything which they know is contrary to their duty, or
(b) they omit to do anything which they know it is their duty to do,
with the intention of conferring an undue or illegal benefit on someone else or
of unfairly or illegally prejudicing someone else.
Prosecuting corrupt public officers is an essential step towards removing
corruption from our public life, which in turn is an essential step towards
Zimbabwe’s economic and social recovery.  Nonetheless the prosecution of
offenders must be carried out fairly and with due process:  the rule of law
demands this.  Reducing the excessively wide scope of criminal abuse of
public office is essential if the anti-corruption drive is to be carried out with
due observance of the rule of law. 

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