News / National
Zimbabwe lawyers blast £118 000 outlay on judges' wigs
07 Apr 2019 at 16:17hrs | Views
LAWYERS have hit out at government's decision to spend thousands of pounds on wigs made in England for local judges, saying the tradition evokes a colonial past that should not exist in modern Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwe's Judicial Services Commission (JSC) has placed an order for 64 wigs from Stanley Ley Legal Outfitters in London, at a cost of £118 400.
Zimbabweans reacted with anger on social media, questioning the wisdom of the government's expenditure at a time when courtrooms are cramped and ill-equipped, the national economy is crumbling and, according to the World Food Programme, 63 percent of the population live below the poverty line.
Their sentiments were echoed by Dumisani Nkomo, chief executive of Bulawayo-based rights organisation Habakkuk Trust, who said: "These are misplaced priorities. We need to focus on bread and butter issues and avoid expenditure on unnecessary luxuries."
After poor rains and erratic weather destroyed crops, almost 5,3 million people in Zimbabwe are facing food insecurity; in 2017, the country was ranked 108th out of the 119 included in the global hunger index.
The government has previously pledged to cut expenditure in response to rising food prices.
Lawyers in Harare said the government was wasting money on keeping a colonial tradition alive.
Beatrice Mtetwa, a senior lawyer in the capital, said Zimbabwe's British colonial past remained embedded in its justice system.
"What surprises me in Zimbabwe is that we say everything against colonialism but we live more colonial than the colonisers themselves," Mtetwa said.
"A normal litigant would be intimidated to get into a courtroom full of ridiculously dressed judges. Why can we not dress decently?
"If we want to wear wigs , why can't we make them in our own way? Those wigs were meant for white judges — we look ridiculous."
Chief Justice Luke Malaba has reportedly insisted on the use of wigs during proceedings.
Some of the wigs, made from horsehair, were delivered last week.
Another top lawyer, Alec Muchadehama, said legal practitioners should drop the tradition and make courts more accessible to the general public.
"I think we should move away from that culture to where judges look like an ordinary man and so that the courts look humane.
"We should simply believe that if a judge appears wearing a suit, it will not make them less of a judge," Muchadehama said.
The use of wigs has been abandoned in South Africa, Kenya and several other Commonwealth countries.
In Britain, judges have stopped wearing wigs when hearing civil and family cases, ending a centuries-old tradition.
"In my view, it's a bit unnecessary. From an ideological point of view, those wigs take us back to the colonial era. They make our courts inaccessible by the ordinary man.
"If the JSC spends that money on rehabilitating dilapidated courts, that would make a lot of sense," said Doug Coltart, a human rights lawyer. — The Guardian
Beatrice Mtetwa is among a host of top lawyers who have criticised the Judiciary Service Commission over the importation of judges' wigs.
Zimbabwe's Judicial Services Commission (JSC) has placed an order for 64 wigs from Stanley Ley Legal Outfitters in London, at a cost of £118 400.
Zimbabweans reacted with anger on social media, questioning the wisdom of the government's expenditure at a time when courtrooms are cramped and ill-equipped, the national economy is crumbling and, according to the World Food Programme, 63 percent of the population live below the poverty line.
Their sentiments were echoed by Dumisani Nkomo, chief executive of Bulawayo-based rights organisation Habakkuk Trust, who said: "These are misplaced priorities. We need to focus on bread and butter issues and avoid expenditure on unnecessary luxuries."
After poor rains and erratic weather destroyed crops, almost 5,3 million people in Zimbabwe are facing food insecurity; in 2017, the country was ranked 108th out of the 119 included in the global hunger index.
The government has previously pledged to cut expenditure in response to rising food prices.
Lawyers in Harare said the government was wasting money on keeping a colonial tradition alive.
"What surprises me in Zimbabwe is that we say everything against colonialism but we live more colonial than the colonisers themselves," Mtetwa said.
"A normal litigant would be intimidated to get into a courtroom full of ridiculously dressed judges. Why can we not dress decently?
"If we want to wear wigs , why can't we make them in our own way? Those wigs were meant for white judges — we look ridiculous."
Chief Justice Luke Malaba has reportedly insisted on the use of wigs during proceedings.
Some of the wigs, made from horsehair, were delivered last week.
Another top lawyer, Alec Muchadehama, said legal practitioners should drop the tradition and make courts more accessible to the general public.
"I think we should move away from that culture to where judges look like an ordinary man and so that the courts look humane.
"We should simply believe that if a judge appears wearing a suit, it will not make them less of a judge," Muchadehama said.
The use of wigs has been abandoned in South Africa, Kenya and several other Commonwealth countries.
In Britain, judges have stopped wearing wigs when hearing civil and family cases, ending a centuries-old tradition.
"In my view, it's a bit unnecessary. From an ideological point of view, those wigs take us back to the colonial era. They make our courts inaccessible by the ordinary man.
"If the JSC spends that money on rehabilitating dilapidated courts, that would make a lot of sense," said Doug Coltart, a human rights lawyer. — The Guardian
Beatrice Mtetwa is among a host of top lawyers who have criticised the Judiciary Service Commission over the importation of judges' wigs.
Source - The Guardian