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ZIMBABWE:
"Disloyal opposition" denied access to public media
IRIN News
October 04, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=43489
HARARE - A senior
Zimbabwean official declared at the weekend that the main opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) would not be allowed access to the state media
in the lead-up to general elections next year.
The statement was made despite the fact that Zimbabwe is a recent signatory
to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Protocol on principles
and guidelines governing democratic elections.
Speaking in Mashonaland West province at the weekend, Jonathan Moyo, Minister
of State for Information, said the MDC was disloyal to the country and
showed allegiance to the United States and Britain.
"Britain and the USA do not give disloyal opposition political parties
access to their public media and we also will not do it here. Unless and
until we have a loyal opposition, it will not be possible for them to
access the public media," said Moyo.
He added that the opposition should stop using foreign radio stations
like the Voice of America if it hoped to access the official press.
Brian Kagoro, chief executive of the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, a group
of pro-democracy NGOs, told IRIN there was nothing surprising about Moyo's
statements.
"The SADC Protocol is just a collection of basic guidelines. The guidelines
are just that - guidelines - and because they are not part of the country's
enforceable laws, the ZANU-PF government can choose to ignore all the
guidelines or implement a few of them for cosmetic purposes to avoid international
isolation," Kagoro said.
In reacting to Moyo's statements, MDC secretary for constitutional and
legal affairs, David Coltart, said: "Since the protocol was signed [in
Mauritius], there is nothing yet to show that the government of Robert
Mugabe is committed to the SADC Protocol ... On the contrary, the government
is ensuring every day that the election next year would not be free and
fair."
The MDC has pulled out of all polls until the government fully implements
the SADC Protocol. General elections are due in March 2005.
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