HARARE — A deepening governance storm is sweeping through Zimbabwe’s health sector after the convicted Registrar of the Medical and Dental Practitioners Council of Zimbabwe (MDPCZ) reportedly returned to duty, igniting outrage and sharp warnings from legal experts.
Collin Benyure, recently sentenced to two years’ imprisonment with half suspended after being found guilty of criminal abuse of duty as a public officer, is now back at the helm of a body tasked with policing professional conduct in the medical field.
The optics alone have proven explosive. But beyond optics, legal practitioners say the issue cuts to the bone of Zimbabwe’s constitutional and administrative law framework.
Experts stress that a conviction is not a temporary inconvenience it is a binding legal status. The mere noting of an appeal does not undo it. Bail pending appeal, they emphasise, affects only the serving of the sentence, not the fact of conviction.
In simple terms, they say, the law still recognises the Registrar as a convicted public officer.
That reality collides sharply with the nature of the office he occupies.
The MDPCZ Registrar is not a peripheral administrator. He is the custodian of the register that determines who may practise medicine in Zimbabwe, the operational authority behind disciplinary proceedings against doctors, and a central figure in safeguarding standards in a profession where public safety is paramount.
Legal analysts describe the role as one of “heightened fiduciary responsibility”, requiring integrity beyond reproach. A conviction for abuse of office, they argue, is not incidental it strikes at the very heart of the qualities required to hold the position.
The contradiction has fuelled growing disquiet: a man convicted of abusing public office now continues to exercise one.
Attention is now widening beyond the individual to the institution itself.
Legal experts warn that those who permitted or failed to prevent the Registrar’s return may face serious consequences. Public officials are bound by statutory duties to act lawfully and to protect the integrity of the institutions they oversee. Where those duties are ignored, particularly in circumstances that benefit a convicted official, the law may interpret such conduct as more than negligence.
In certain instances, it may amount to criminal abuse of duty placing decision-makers themselves in legal jeopardy.
This raises a chilling prospect: that the controversy may not end with one conviction, but could extend to those entrusted with governance of the Council.
The reputational damage is already unfolding.
The MDPCZ’s authority rests on its ability to discipline medical practitioners for misconduct—often on grounds of dishonesty, negligence, or ethical breaches. Its legitimacy depends on public confidence that it is led by individuals of unquestionable integrity.
That foundation now appears shaken.
Health sector observers warn that the implications are profound. If regulatory bodies themselves are seen to disregard the consequences of criminal conduct, the entire framework of professional accountability risks being hollowed out from within.
For patients, practitioners, and the broader public, the question is no longer abstract. It is immediate and unsettling: whether those entrusted to enforce standards are themselves subject to them.
As calls intensify for intervention by the Ministry of Health and other oversight authorities, the issue has evolved into a defining test of governance.
Legal experts insist the position is clear. A conviction stands until overturned. Bail does not erase it. And public office especially one so sensitive cannot be insulated from its consequences.
What remains uncertain is whether the institutions at the centre of this controversy will act on that principle or allow a precedent that could reverberate far beyond the health sector.

