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letter to Nelson Mandela - "Help us to prevent Zimbabwe being
an example of brutal and iniquitous repression"
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
June 29, 2005
Dear Mr President,
Reporters Without Borders, a worldwide press freedom organisation,
would like to put before you an anguished appeal from independent
journalists working in Zimbabwe.
We have taken
this step of contacting you since Zimbabwe has recently sunk even
further into repression. A new law is to come into effect in the
next few days that will provide for prison sentences of up to 20
years for publishing "false information". Zimbabwean law has since
2002 already been one of the most draconian for the press in Africa
and the country's legislative arsenal grows from one month to the
next and becomes ever more terrifying. President Robert Mugabe has
been making enthusiastic use of it, since there is nothing to stop
him.
For several
years now, his government has rained down on his country's independent
press every means of repression at his disposal. Police brutality,
secret service harassment, heavy punishments handed down by an easily
persuadable justice system and bolstered by draconian laws, have
become the daily lot of journalists who do not sing the regime's
praises. The Daily News, the quality of which you know and
which our organisation awarded the 2003 Reporters Without Borders/Fondation
de France press freedom prize, has still not been allowed to reappear,
even though the Supreme Court recognised that the ban against it
was illegal. These past weeks, journalists who were working for
it in 2003 have all in turn been receiving court summonses to answer
before the courts for this "unforgivable crime" in the eyes of Robert
Mugabe of not being submissive in reporting on reality. They face
two years of their lives in prison, in jails that former MP Roy
Bennett, released on 28 June after nine months, described as "hell"
in which his warders gave him as his sole item of clothing, a uniform
covered in human excrement. They will know their fate on 12 October.
But oppression
of Zimbabwe's journalists is not limited to those on the Daily
News. Almost every day our organisation receives new information
about a journalist threatened, harassed, imprisoned, expelled, beaten
or pushed into unemployment. You know the reality of imprisonment,
the real deprivation of freedom that is hidden behind abstract judicial
terms. You know then that beyond these articles of the law, men
and women suffer as you suffered for 27 years because of a racist
regime whose favourite weapons were, apart from the gun, injustice
and spreading fear. Today these same weapons are being used at the
borders of your country, between Beitbridge and Kanyemba.
Despite our appeals and those of other international organisations,
despite repeated requests from governments that are allies of South
Africa, the South African President Thabo Mbeki refuses to condemn
Robert Mugabe's treatment of his people. Beyond your personal courage,
it was internal and international struggles and international campaigning
that allowed you to leave prison on 11 February 1990, after judges
had sentenced you to life imprisonment. Today, Reporters Without
Borders appeals to you, to your authority on the African continent
and the respect that you inspire to help Zimbabwe. We solemnly ask
you to do your utmost so that Zimbabwean journalists can at least
carry out their work without fear of the brutality of a predatory
state. Help us to prevent Zimbabwe being an example of brutal and
iniquitous repression.
I trust you will give our case your careful consideration.
Yours sincerely,
Robert Ménard
Secretary General
Background
On 2 June 2005, Zimbabwe's official newspaper published an amendment
to Chapter 9.23 of the criminal code, with the approval of President
Robert Mugabe. The new law, approved by parliament at the end of
2004, provides for longer terms of imprisonment and higher fines
than the anti-freedom laws already in force since 2002, the Public
Order and Security Act (POSA) and the Access to Information and
Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA). The law made it illegal for "anyone
inside or outside Zimbabwe to publish or communicate to any other
person a statement which is wholly or materially false with the
intention or realising that there is real risk or a possibility
of any of the following:
- Inciting
or promoting public disorder or public violence or endangering
public safety.
- Adversely
affecting the defence or economic interests of Zimbabwe.
- Undermining
public confidence in a law enforcement agency, the Prison Service
or the Defence Forces of Zimbabwe.
- Interfering
with, disrupting or interrupting any essential service."
An offence will
still have been committed even if the publication or communication
does not result in any of the envisaged scenarios.
A journalist sentenced under Section 31(a) of the new law is liable
to imprisonment of up to 20 years or a fine of 2.5 million Zimbabwe
dollars (about 210 euros). The date on which the law come into force
will be published shortly. The Justice Ministry said that this publication
could happen "at any time from now".
Since 2002, Zimbabwe journalists were already under threat of long
prison sentences under existing laws. Section 15 of POSA provides
for example for a prison sentence of five years and a fine of 100,000
Zimbabwe dollars for publishing "incorrect information". Section
80 of the AIPPA, sets out a prison term of two years and 400,000
Zimbabwe dollars fine for publishing "false information".
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website
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