Anne-Marie Gowora

Anne-Marie Gowora is a Zimbabwean judge who currently serves as a justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe since 2012. Previously, she served on the High Court of Zimbabwe beginning in 2000.

Anne-Marie Gowora
Justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe
Assumed office
2 May 2012 –
Acting: 1 January 2012 – 2 May 2012
Appointed byRobert Mugabe
Judge of the High Court of Zimbabwe
In office
21 December 2000  1 January 2012
Appointed byRobert Mugabe
Personal details
Alma materUniversity of Rhodesia (LL.B)
ProfessionJudge; lawyer

Education

Gowora attended the University of Rhodesia (today the University of Zimbabwe), where she studied law in a multiracial class of 38 students, including whites, blacks, Coloureds, and Indians.[1] Among her former law classmates are prominent Harare lawyer George Chikumbirike, and judges Ishmael Chatikobo, Moses Chinhengo, and Jacqueline Pratt.[1] Gowora graduated in 1979 with a Bachelor of Laws.[1]

Before becoming a judge, Gowora spent much of her career working in the office of the Attorney General.[2][3] At the time she was appointed to the High Court bench, she was a partner in a private law firm.[4] In 2000, President Robert Mugabe appointed her to the High Court of Zimbabwe, along with three others, including Rita Makarau, her former law firm partner.[4] A report by United States Department of State's Bureau of African Affairs at that time described the appointments as a move by Mugabe to dilute the independence of the High Court.[3] Gowora and the other appointees were sworn in by Mugabe on 21 December 2000, expanding the size of the High Court from 15 to 19 judges.[3] Of the four appointees to the High Court, the State Department report described three as loyalists of Mugabe's ruling ZANU–PF party, but wrote of Gowora, "it is unclear where her political leanings lie."[3] However, University of Bordeaux professor Daniel Compagnon described her as an "undeniably pro-ZANU–PF judge," noting that she received a farm in October 2005 as a result of Zimbabwe's land reform program.[2]

In November 2011, Gowora was named acting justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe, with effect from 1 January 2012. Later that year, President Mugabe appointed her Supreme Court justice. She was sworn in, alongside High Court appointee Happias Zhou, on 2 May 2012 at State House in a ceremony attended by Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku, Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa, Supreme Court Justice Rita Makarau, among other public officials.[5] Acting Justice Yunus Omerjee was also supposed to be sworn in that day, but he was out of the country.[5] In 2013, Gowora was appointed to the Constitutional Court of Zimbabwe, which is part of the Supreme Court.

gollark: ██% of GTech™ dark god summoning systems run on JS now, you know.
gollark: To invoke dark bee gods?
gollark: Oh, so it just combusts toast. I see.
gollark: I mean, I'm pretty sure you need to actually have some sort of physical burning thing for that.
gollark: But *can* it throw fire?

See also

References

  1. Samukange, Jonathan (2011-05-06). "Adieu brilliant gentleman, tenacious legal mind". The Herald. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  2. Compagnon, Daniel (2011). A Predictable Tragedy: Robert Mugabe and the Collapse of Zimbabwe. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 158. ISBN 9780812200041.
  3. "Zimbabwe President Dilutes Independence of High Court with New Appointments". Bureau of African Affairs.
  4. Enforcing the Rule of Law in Zimbabwe (PDF). Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum. September 2001. p. 45.
  5. "President appoints judges". The Herald. 2012-05-03. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.