MASVINGO – Human rights lawyers have given police seven days to turn over names of police officers who allegedly tortured students from Gokomere High School in Masvingo.

Police on Monday detained 40 pupils who were later released without charge following disturbances at the school during which windows were smashed, and the headmaster’s vehicle stoned.

“On behalf of parents and guardians of some Gokomere students, we have given the Officer in Charge of Masvingo Rural Police Station a seven-day ultimatum to investigate and respond by giving us names of police officers who brutally assaulted and tortured them on November 7 and 8,” the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights said on Wednesday.

The lawyers said the students were “left nursing injuries after they were assaulted and tortured by police officers who arrested them for allegedly protesting against poor diet and learning conditions.”

Detained … Some of the 40 Gokomere High Students seen getting into their school bus after they were released by police on November 8, 2021

According to TellZim newspaper, school authorities called police after some food stocks disappeared in the dining hall.

Two police officers were deployed to the school where they allegedly used crude interview techniques, including brutalising students.

On the second day of investigations, the students allegedly rose up against the police officers in protests that led to the deployment of more police officers. By then, the students had allegedly destroyed window panes at the dining hall and stoned a vehicle driven by headmaster Acquanos Mazhunga.

Forty students were rounded up and transported on the school bus to the police station where they were held for several hours while being interrogated.

Lawyers stepped in and told police the students could not be interviewed in the absence of their guardians, leading to their release.

Mazhunga and the mission school’s Priest in Charge James Magadzire are currently on bail pending trial over alleged mismanagement at the school after an audit raised red flags. The Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission filed charges after it emerged that the school had been run for three years since 2018 without a school development committee.