In March 2007
Zimbabwe police raided
Harvest House, the headquarters of the political opposition the
Movement for Democratic Change, and detained and tortured scores of people. After hearing about this incident
Johannesburg-based NGO the
Southern African Litigation Centre (SALC) documented the torture and set out the legal landscape in a detailed dossier which was submitted to the Priority Crimes Litigation Unit in the
National Prosecuting Authority (NPA). The document maintained that because the evidence supported the conclusion that the torture was widespread and systematic it should be regarded as a crime against humanity. SALC requested that the South African prosecuting and police services initiate an investigation into the torture, and argued that South Africa's domestic and international obligations in respect of international crimes compelled the authorities to do so. The South African Implementation of the
Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Act (the ICC Act) had been enacted to give effect to the country's obligations as a signatory to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, and so to enable South African courts to try perpetrators of international crimes as set out in the Rome Statute. The ICC Act empowers South Africa authorities to investigate and prosecute persons accused of committing
crimes against humanity, genocide and war crimes if the perpetrator is present in South Africa, even if the perpetrator is not South African and the crimes were not committed on South African territory. The SALC dossier stated that the Zimbabwean officials suspected of committing the torture regularly travelled to South Africa and so the country had jurisdiction under the ICC Act to investigate them. In June 2009 the NPA informed SALC that the South African authorities – the NPA and the
South African Police Service (SAPS) – had taken the decision not to investigate the allegations contained in the dossier. ==Litigation==