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RSF
asks EU to take sanctions against Zimbabwean leaders
Reporters
sans frontières
January 09, 2002
As
a new round of negotiations on the human rights situation in Zimbabwe
opens in Brussels on 11 January 2002, Reporters Sans Frontières
(RSF), in a letter addressed to Mr. Josep Piqué I Camps,
Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs, representative of the Presidency
of the European Union, called for strong measures to be taken against
political leaders of that country.
"The human rights and press freedom situation in Zimbabwe is catastrophic.
The EU has put in place sanctions mechanisms in case any member
state engaged in massive human rights violations. We are asking
the Union to apply such sanctions, not against the people of Zimbabwe,
but against their leaders. Brussels could also impose travel restrictions
on President Mugabe’s close associates and members of his government,"
said Robert Ménard, RSF Secretary General.
"The President and the government in Harare are harassing both local
and foreign journalists with impunity. There are continuous threats
and arrests, and the independent press is finding it more and more
difficult to play its role of informing public opinion. This must
stop and the EU must exert its influence to bring this to an end,"
the press freedom watchdog leader added. RSF is calling on EU officials
to implement Article 96 of the Cotonou Convention which prescribes
certain sanctions in cases of human rights abuse, failure to uphold
democratic principles and the rule of law.
In 2001, Zimbabwe became one of the countries in the whole of African
continent that most suppressed press freedom. Twenty local journalists
were arrested and three foreign press correspondents were expelled
from the country. President Robert Mugabe is listed by RSF as one
of the thirty nine (39) "predators" of press freedom in the world.
Throughout the year 2001, the president and his government uttered
shocking comments against the press.
In September for instance, the Minister for Communication Jonathan
Moyo accused the BBC and the British dailies, The Guardian and the
Daily Telegraph of "working for British intelligence services".
He added that "in the interest of law and order, competent authorities
will crack down on some well known individuals in order to curb
the law of the jungle they are trying to create in the country through
the media."
The Daily News, the only independent daily paper in the country
has been subjected to real harassment by the authorities. Its editor,
Geoffrey Nyarota has been arrested several times in the course of
the year.
The government and the ruling party, the Zimbabwe African National
Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) launched a series of law suits against
the paper, demanding huge compensation "for damages caused by the
paper" aimed at stifling. The harsh economic situation and the violence
pitting white farmers against war veterans have only helped the
government to step up its repression against the most critical newspapers
in the country.
Already at the end of June, the EU ministers of foreign affairs
expressed their concern about the deteriorating political situation
in Zimbabwe. They called on Zimbabwean authorities to uphold the
rule of law, freedom of the press and the independence of the judiciary.
Days earlier, the US government accused Zimbabwean authorities of
forbidding the press to report on what was really going on in the
countryside.
A Bill on free
access to information is now being debated in the Zimbabwean parliament.
If it becomes law, it will forbid foreign journalists from working
in the country. The Bill also makes it clear that all media professionals
will have to be granted authorisation by a special commission to
be set up by the government, before being allowed to work. The authorisation
will be renewable after one year.
For more
information, contact:
Reporters
sans frontières
Africa
desk
Email: africa@rsf.org
Website: www.rsf.org
Tel: 33 1 44 83 84 84
Fax: 33 1 45 23 11 51
5, rue Geoffroy-Marie
75009 Paris
FRANCE
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