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Press
freedom falls prey to arrests and torture
IRIN News
April 11, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=71567
The Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) in Zimbabwe has warned journalists
of an increasingly hostile working environment after the abduction
and subsequent murder of a freelance reporter, and the arrest and
torture of two other foreign correspondents.
"The unlawful arrest
and subsequent severe assault of photojournalist Tsvangirai Mukwazhi
while in police custody on 11 March 2007, and that of Gift Phiri
on 1 April 2007, behoves Zimbabwean journalists to be on high alert
as they conduct their lawful and professional duties," MISA
said in a statement.
"The traumatic events
of the past two months should also serve as a harbinger of the unknown
dangers that lie ahead for journalists and media workers, given
that Mukwazhi's whereabouts remained unknown until his subsequent
appearance in court three days later on 14 March 2007."
Mukwazhi was arrested
while covering a prayer meeting called by civic society organisations
three weeks ago, when opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) leaders were also detained. He was allegedly severely tortured
while in police custody, despite having the requisite practicing
certificate from the country's media regulatory authority, the Media
and Information Commission (MIC).
Phiri, an independent
journalist who contributes to the British-based 'The Zimbabwean'
newspaper, was also arrested last week and severely tortured. He
was held in custody for nearly a week before being released but
was subsequently charged with practicing without a license and "writing
falsehoods".
Last week, Edward Chikomba,
a cameraman previously with the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation,
the state broadcaster, was abducted from his home in Harare and
later found murdered, his body dumped by the roadside near Darwendale,
a township about 60km north of the capital, Harare.
Many journalists believe
Chikomba was murdered for allegedly transmitting the images of a
bruised and battered Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of one of the factions
of the main opposition party, Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
to the international media, a charge the police have strongly denied.
Police spokesperson Wayne
Bvudzijena told IRIN the police sympathised with the Chikomba family
and were still investigating the circumstances surrounding his abduction
and murder.
The Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists (ZUJ), which represents the interests of
the majority of journalists, also expressed the fear that there
was a deliberate government policy to harass and intimidate the
media. ZUJ secretary-general Foster Dongozi told IRIN that the organisation
condemned all forms of media harassment.
"We condemn in the
strongest possible terms the abductions and torture of journalists
in the past few weeks. More frightening is the murder of Chikomba,
whose killers are yet to be brought to book," Dongozi said.
"We wonder if this
is government policy to silence the independent media, and we have
already engaged the minister of Information and Publicity to clarify
the government position on the issue; journalists are worried and
wonder who is going to be the next victim of such barbarism. We
are also concerned about the continuing arrest and assault of accredited
journalists in the country," he added.
Information and Publicity
minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu told IRIN that the pattern of harassment
and intimidation seen in the past three weeks was not a reflection
of government policy. "Which country would allow such lawlessness
to prevail? It is not our policy, and we condemn all such acts."
He said his ministry was also investigating the incidents.
He expressed confidence
in the police, and suggested that opposition elements bent on tarnishing
the image of the country could be responsible for the wave of assaults
on the media.
A number of
other foreign correspondents have either been arrested or threatened
by government since the beginning of the year. In 2006, Reporters
Without Borders, a media watchdog, ranked Zimbabwe at 140 out of
168 countries listed in its Press Freedom Index, just below Equatorial
Guinea and Sudan.
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