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Censors
hoist on their own petard
The Globe and Mail (Canada)
July 07, 2004
For the past five
years, the government of Zimbabwe has coupled attacks on the political
opposition with a systematic clampdown on the independent media. Authorities
have censored press outlets, arrested dozens of journalists on spurious
charges and allowed ruling party supporters to attack and harass reporters
with impunity. For the past two years, Zanu PF has used a media-licensing
regime to rigidly control the country's press. The government gets to
decide who can be a journalist and which media can operate. Last September,
Information Minister Jonathan Moyo, Zanu PF's feisty spin-doctor, used
a licensing pretext to shut down the Daily News, Zimbabwe's most popular
newspaper and a vocal critic of President Robert Mugabe's regime. Last
year, the government capped its effective ban on foreign journalists when
it defied a court order and forcibly expelled veteran Guardian reporter
Andrew Meldrum from the country. Mr. Mugabe's government has remained
impervious to criticism from the international community about its treatment
of the media. What quiet diplomacy has been tried by the country's African
neighbours has caused little stir in the ranks of the ruling Zanu PF.
But what may have a bearing on the future of Zimbabwe's media are the
growing tremors within Zanu PF itself.
Last month, the country's
Media and Information Commission, a government-controlled media licensing
and regulatory body, closed a private weekly named The Tribune. The MIC
told the newspaper that its licence would be suspended for one year for
multiple violations of the country's draconian press law. The Tribune's
crimes? Failing to inform the MIC that the paper had new owners, a new
title and was now publishing once a week instead of twice. Given the Mugabe
government's distaste for the private media, it should come as no surprise
that authorities would shutter another newspaper with little provocation.
But there is something different about this closure, something seemingly
nonsensical. The Tribune is owned by a Zanu PF legislator. Why would the
government turn against one of its own? Zimbabwean journalists say The
Tribune's closure is related to Zanu PF internal politics. Since Mr. Mugabe
announced to Kenyan journalists in May that he planned to retire when
his current term expires in 2008, the latent factionalism in the ruling
party has intensified, becoming an apparent succession struggle. In these
power scuffles, Jonathan Moyo has been pitted against some of Zanu PF's
veteran old guard, including his immediate party superior, Secretary for
Information and Publicity Nathan Shamuyarira.
The battle between
the two officials became public after Mr. Shamuyarira invited a British
Sky News team to Harare to interview Mr. Mugabe in May. Mr. Moyo, who
saw no reason why "imperialist mouthpieces" such as Sky News should get
to talk to the President, vociferously criticized the decision and almost
thwarted the interview by trying to have the journalists deported. Mr.
Shamuyarira is known to be a friend of The Tribune's publisher and Zanu
PF MP Kindness Paradza. It is widely believed that Mr. Paradza entered
the party through Mr. Shamuyarira's patronage. Mr. Paradza is also a veteran
independent journalist, and during his maiden speech in parliament in
March, he criticized the country's repressive press law, an unheard-of
gesture from a member of the ruling party, and one that clearly provoked
the ire of the pugnacious Mr. Moyo. The Tribune has also carried some
articles that indirectly criticized Mr. Moyo, such as one implying that
he had used state agencies to appropriate a lucrative farm for himself.
Mr. Moyo has used the state media to issue thinly veiled attacks on his
opponents within the party, and the Tribune articles would easily have
been perceived as retaliation. In this context, it is easy to see why
Mr. Moyo would use his pet media commission to silence the newspaper.
With Mr. Mugabe's
retirement on the horizon and elections due next year, the internal jostling
for power in Zanu PF is likely to heat up. But senior party officials
who oppose Mr. Moyo's high ambitions are sure to face a communication
problem, since Mr. Moyo has a stranglehold on all state media. Utilizing
the few remaining private media to voice their positions is impossible
for these officials, as it would be seen as colluding with the enemy.
And besides, Mr. Moyo can freely revoke the licences of media that criticize
him. It appears that, except for Mr. Moyo, Zanu PF's leaders have become
victims of their own repressive media policies. Perhaps these same officials,
who have worked so assiduously to stamp out press freedom in Zimbabwe,
will understand its value now that they have to cope with the consequences
of their actions. It is unlikely that appeals for greater press freedom
will find many sympathetic ears in the government just yet. While Zanu
PF remains preoccupied with defeating the country's political opposition,
it will continue to rebuff international criticism of its human-rights
violations. The African Union summit of heads of state is taking place
this week in Addis Ababa, but it is unlikely to do more than gloss over
Mr. Mugabe's penchant for censorship. Nonetheless, the international community
still has a duty to protest the Zimbabwean government's abuses, and to
pressure Zanu PF to scrap its stifling licensing regime - not in order
to gain converts among self-serving politicians who would view greater
press freedom as politically expedient, but on behalf of Zimbabwean citizens,
who are increasingly losing their ability to speak out against Mr. Mugabe's
repressive tactics.
Adam Posluns
is the research associate for the Africa program at the Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ), an international press freedom watchdog based in New
York
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