By Rosina John
In Summary
On May 8, this year, Judge Kaduri ruled that
particulars of offences instituted against Lwakatare and Rwezaura did
not show elements of terrorism as the law required.
Dar es Salaam. Chadema Defense and Security
director Wilfred Lwakatare yesterday filed an objection seeking the
dismissal of an application by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP)
challenging the nullification of terrorist charges against him.
The objection was filed yesterday at the Court of
Appeal through his lawyer Peter Kibatala. He advanced two grounds of
objection to fault the application in which the DPP is asking the court
to call and revise records of the High Court.
Mr Lwakatare will continue to remain in custody
after the Kisutu Magistrate’s Court failed to rule on his bail
application. Mr Lwakatare and his co-accused Joseph Rwezaura were
ordered to remain in remand until June 10, as they await the magistrate,
who is conducting proceedings at the lower court to return from his
annual leave. In the objection, Lwakatare is requesting the Court of
Appeal to dismiss the application in question because the DPP has not
attached a copy of proceedings of the High Court, which is the subject
of revision.
His lawyer also stated, on the grounds of
objection, that the affidavit in support of the DPP’s application was
defective because it contained extraneous matters. In his application,
the DPP seeks the appeals court to examine records of the High Court for
the purpose of satisfying itself as to correctness, legality or
propriety
of the ruling and orders made by Judge Lawrence Kaduri on May 8, this year. “It is improper for the High
Court to determine the validity of the provisional charge,” reads one of grounds of the application. Lwakatare and Rwezaura are the accused persons in the first case to be instituted since the Terrorist Act was enacted in 2000.
of the ruling and orders made by Judge Lawrence Kaduri on May 8, this year. “It is improper for the High
Court to determine the validity of the provisional charge,” reads one of grounds of the application. Lwakatare and Rwezaura are the accused persons in the first case to be instituted since the Terrorist Act was enacted in 2000.
On May 8, this year, Judge Kaduri ruled that
particulars of offences instituted against Lwakatare and Rwezaura did
not show elements of terrorism as the law required.
He explained that a charge that can set in motion
the machinery of justice has to contain reasonable information as to the
nature of the offence charged. The judge held, therefore, that there
was an error in framing the charges against the accused person.
Following such a decision, Lwakatare and Rwezaura
are now facing only one count of conspiracy to commit an offence of
harming the managing editor of a private owned newspaper, Dennis Msacky.
Such offence filed under the Penal Code is bailable under the law.
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