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Zimbabwe:
Crackdown on the press intensifies
Human
Rights Watch (HRW)
February 09, 2006
http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2006/02/08/zimbab12632.htm
New York– The Zimbabwean
government has launched a new assault on the country’s remaining independent
press through a wave of criminal prosecutions and arrests, Human Rights
Watch said today.
Tomorrow in Harare,
six trustees of Voice
of the People (VOP), a privately-owned radio station, are due to appear
in court on criminal charges. On January 24, the authorities brought charges
of broadcasting without a license against six of the station’s trustees.
VOP was one of the few alternatives to the state-controlled Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation, the only broadcaster with a license to operate legally in
the country.
In addition, police in Mutare on January 18 arrested Sydney Saize, an
independent journalist who had allegedly filed a story for Voice of America
claiming that militants of the ruling ZANU-PF party had beaten teachers
in the city. Saize faces possible criminal charges for practicing journalism
without accreditation and publishing falsehoods punishable under the Public
Order and Security Act of 2002.
"The Zimbabwean government is using criminal charges to muzzle independent
reporting and criticism," said Paul Simo, Africa advocacy director
at Human Rights Watch. "This crackdown targets media that criticize
government institutions, officials and the ruling party."
Earlier in January, Zimbabwe’s government-appointed Media and Information
Commission (MIC) threatened to cancel the license of the Financial
Gazette, a privately-owned newspaper, if it did not retract a story
that had questioned the commission’s independence from government. On
January 29, the commission refused to renew the accreditation of fifteen
journalists working for the Zimbabwe Independent, another privately-owned
newspaper, until the paper was forced to retract a similar story.
Even individuals somehow associated with those involved in independent
media organizations have been harassed by the police. Zimbabwean police
arrested and detained four employees of Arnold Tsunga, one of the VOP
trustees facing trial, for failing to disclose Tsunga’s whereabouts to
police. A lawyer representing two of the employees (who have since been
released) told Human Rights Watch that a policeman repeatedly slapped
one of the men around the head while in detention. A subsequent medical
examination by a private doctor showed that the victim sustained a punctured
ear drum during the assault.
In December, police arrested three female employees of VOP and refused
to release them, demanding that VOP’s director, John Masuku, turn himself
in to police. The women spent four days in custody and were only released
when Masuku appeared at a police station in Harare where he was then arrested.
The Office of the Attorney General refused to prosecute the employees
due to a lack of evidence of any criminal offense.
"The Zimbabwean government has detained innocent people to coerce
others to surrender," said Simo. "This is a gross abuse of the
criminal justice system,"
Background
In the last five years, Zimbabwe’s government has enacted laws that give
it discretionary control over who may operate a media outlet and practice
journalism, as well as broad powers to prosecute persons critical of the
government. In March, Human Rights Watch documented how the government
has selectively used these laws to restrict independent media activity
through intimidation, arbitrary arrests, and criminal prosecutions of
journalists. These practices violate international guarantees to freedom
of expression.
Under the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act of 2002,
owners of media houses who do not register with the Media and Information
Commission face up to two years in prison if convicted. An amendment passed
on January 7 2005 provides for criminal penalties to journalists who operate
without accreditation.
The Broadcasting Services Act of 2001 reinforced the state’s monopoly
over all electronic broadcasting. The law gives the Minister of State
for Information and Publicity the authority to determine who gets a broadcasting
license and under what circumstances, to tighten restrictions on the nature,
quality and quantity of information broadcast through radio and television,
and to ban broadcasters who are deemed to be a threat to national security.
The Public Order and Security Act of 2002 introduced a range of overbroad
and vague criminal offences that trammel the right to free expression.
The law criminalizes criticism of the president, whether his person or
his office. It also prohibits the publication of a false statement that
prejudices or is intended to prejudice the country's defense or economic
interests, or which undermines or is intended to undermine public confidence
in a law enforcement agency, and the holding of a public gathering without
giving the police four days' written notice.
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