From: as on
AG fails to extract confession from witness

http://www.zimonline.co.za/

by Own Correspondents Wednesday 27 January 2010

HARARE - The prosecution on Tuesday tried without success to cajole and
lure
its chief witness Michael Peter Hitschmann - earlier declared hostile
by the
court - into admitting that he had direct links with Prime Minister
Morgan
Tsvangirai's top aide, Roy Bennett, who is on trial for treason.

Attorney General (AG) Johannes Tomana - who started cross-examining
Hitschmann on Monday after he was declared a hostile witness by High
Court
Judge Chinembiri Bhunu, failed to get the witness to give information
that
could link the MDC treasurer general to the charges he is facing when
he
finished his cross examination on Tuesday.

The trial continues Wednesday with the defence team led by Beatrice
Mtetwa
questioning Hitschmann to clarify statements he made under cross
examination
from Tomana.

Hitschmann maintained his previous testimony distancing himself from
email
messages that the state claims link Bennett to a plot to destabilise
the
country through acts of banditry and terrorism.

"I don't know the password to the emails of those documents. Are we
together, I could not have a password to an email that is not mine,"
said
Hitschmann, adding that the purported emails had been shown to him by
state
agents and were never printed from his laptop in his presence.

The AG also said arms of war found in Hitschmann's possession were
procured
with financial assistance from Bennett, a claim the Mutare firearms
dealer
and former policeman denied, saying although he had a Mozambican bank
account it was for payments of businesses he would have conducted in
that
country since 1985.

Hitschmann said he offered bodyguard services in the former Portuguese
colony and also had properties there, among other businesses.

Prosecutors allege Hitschmann was paid by Bennett to buy weapons to
assassinate President Robert Mugabe. They say Hitschmann implicated
Bennett
in 2006 when he was arrested after being found in possession of
firearms,
claims the gun dealer denies saying he was tortured into making the
confessions during interrogation at a military barracks in March that
year.

Bennett, who faces a possible death sentence if convicted in a case
that has
heightened tensions in Zimbabwe's fragile coalition government - formed
last
February by MDC leader Tsvangirai and Mugabe after a violent election
in
2008 - has pleaded not guilty to the treason charges levelled against
him.
The MDC says the case against Bennett, Tsvangirai's nominee for deputy
agriculture minister, is politically motivated and aimed at keeping him
out
of government. - ZimOnline