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Protect media freedoms
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
April 13, 2012
Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition is shocked and outraged by today's attack on the
staff of the Daily News by a self-proclaimed ZANU PF supporter identified
as Sheila Svesve who threatened
to bomb the newspaper offices because of its coverage of the alleged
illness of President Robert Mugabe. The Coalition calls upon the
police to arrest and hold accountable the hooligan for her reprehensible
actions. The Ministries of Home Affairs and Information must publicly
deplore such acts of hooliganism and disregard for the constitution.
According to
eyewitness reports from The Daily News, Svesve entered the newspaper's
offices in Harare's Central Business District at around 11am
claiming to have a story for the paper. Upon entry, the misguided
Zanu PF supporter threatened to bomb the offices and to beat up
staffers whom she accused of disrespecting President Mugabe by reporting
on his alleged ill-health. Svesve claimed that she had brought back-up
in the form of the infamous Mbare based Chipangano terror group
before taking off her pants and shamelessly urinating on the floor
inside the offices. She exited the offices an hour later after management
at the private media house contacted the police.
If the ZANU
PF supporter had grievances, she should have followed proper channels
to register her concerns including filing a formal complaint with
the Voluntary
Media Council of Zimbabwe (VMCZ).
This is not
the first time that ZANU PF supporters have attacked the private
press this year. In March, alleged ZANU PF supporters effected a
'ban' on The Daily News in Mutoko and Murehwa while
alleged ZANU PF youths tore up copies of the newspaper in Kadoma.
Members of the Zimbabwe National War Veterans Association also threatened
to shut down Newsday. The culprits in the above criminal acts have
not been apprehended. Such criminal acts should be frowned upon
and perpetrators arrested as a step towards curbing the growing
impunity among ZANU PF supporters and militia groups who attack
private newspaper personnel and pro- democracy advocates.
The Coalition
wishes to remind the inclusive government that they have an obligation
to protect and ensure that every Zimbabwean enjoys their fundamental
freedoms. The attacks on the media infringe on the freedom of expression
enshrined in Article 20 of the Zimbabwean constitution
and the rights of all citizens to receive and impart information.
The government of Zimbabwe is a state party to the Windhoek Declaration
on Press Freedom (1991) which states that,
'Consistent
with Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the establishment, maintenance
and fostering of an independent, pluralistic and free press is essential
to the development and maintenance of democracy in a nation, and
for economic development.'
To that end,
the government should take all necessary steps to ensure that the
media is protected and they operate in an environment free from
unnecessary hindrances on political, economic, social or cultural
grounds. Political parties should also reign in their supporters
and dismantle militia groups which are causing grief to ordinary
Zimbabweans.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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