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The Fall and Rise of The Cane in Zimbabwe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Extract

The legality of judicial corporal punishment is an issue which has caused considerable disagreement amongst jurists, legislators and criminal justice personnel, for its use has serious moral, constitutional and penological implications. In Zimbabwe, two decisions handed down by the Supreme Court together with a later constitutional amendment Act have highlighted the divergence of views on this matter. It is thus the intention of this article to examine critically the issue from a constitutional and penological perspective.

In 1987 in S v. Ncube a full bench of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe unanimously held that the sentence of whipping for adults contravened section 15(1) of the Declaration of Rights which is contained in the Constitution of Zimbabwe in that it constituted a punishment which in its very nature was both inhuman and degrading. In his seminal judgment, Gubbay, J. A., had regard to four factors, namely: (i) the current trend of thinking amongst distinguished jurists and leading academics; (ii) the abolition of whipping in many countries of the world as being repugnant to the consciences of civilized men; (iii) the progressive move of the courts in countries in which whipping is not susceptible to constitutional attack to restrict its imposition to instances where a serious, cruel, brutal and humiliating crime has been perpetrated; (iv) the decreasing recourse to the penalty of whipping in Zimbabwe, especially over the previous ten years and the declining number of laws on the statute book in which it remained a permissible penalty.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1991

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References

1 1988 (2) S.A. 702;Google Scholar[1988] L.R.C. (Const.) 442.Google Scholar

2 At 721H–722D and 466–467 respectively.

3 (1978) 2 E.H.R.R. 1.

4 See General Laws Amendment Act, 1989.

5 The whipping of females was already strictly forbidden.

6 For example, in S v. Ndhlovu 1981 Z.L.R. 600,Google Scholar Gubbay, J., (as he then was) noted that although judicial officers held differing opinions on the subject, “some, like myself, are generally opposed to it as an inhuman and degrading mode of punishment”. See also S v. F 1989 (1) S.A. 460 (Z.H.)Google Scholar

7 S.C. 64/89.

8 Ibid. at 11.

9 At 33.

10 Among the authorities referred to were Kirkpatrick “Corporal Punishment” (19671968) 10 Criminal Law Quarterly 320Google Scholar and Van Zyl-Smit, and Offen, “Corporal Punishment—Joining Issue” (1984) 8 S.A.C.C. 69.Google Scholar

11 At 37.

12 See, for example, n. 10 above.

13 At 16. In this he was following the view of WARREN, C.J., in the United States Supreme Court in the case of Trop v. Dulles (356 U.S. 86) which was a case involving the Eighth Amendment.

14 This originates from the “Second Judicial Colloquium on the Domestic Application of International Human Rights Norms” which was held in Harare, Zimbabwe in April 1989 and which was attended by senior Commonwealth judges.

15 Parliamentary Debates 6 12, 1990.Google Scholar

16 See p. 95 above.

17 See my earlier article in this volume at p. 96.

18 At 18. He gave the case of Ncube as an example of this activity.