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Statement on the recent appointment of the Media and Information
Commission
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe
June 06, 2002
The Media
Monitoring Project views with grave concern the recent appointment
of commissioners to the Media and Information Commission as provided
for in the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act.
MMPZ notes that:
Firstly, the Commission itself is not an independent body since
it is appointed by a government minister and is directly accountable
to him.
Secondly, that while the Commission purports to encourage and enforce
ethical and professional journalistic practice; the functions of
the Commission serve to restrict the public's constitutional rights
to freedom of expression and limits those wishing to exercise these
rights.
Thirdly, the composition of the Commission is not representative
of Zimbabwean society.
And finally, the Commission has been constituted within an Act that
is in fact designed to restrict the free flow of information and
opinion, and the people's rights to these fundamental freedoms.
In the words of the former Minister of Justice, Zanu PF MP Eddison
Zvobgo, the law in its original form, is the "the most calculated
and determined assault on our liberties guaranteed by the Constitution..."
The substance of the Act has changed very little since then.
Freedom of expression and the free flow of information in the public
interest are the cornerstones of any democracy and should be subject
to minimal and specific restrictions.
This Act does
precisely the opposite and its constitutionality should be subjected
to legal challenge. The commission set up to enforce this anti-democratic
legislation therefore represents a tool by which government intends
to curb access to information and the practice of gathering and
disseminating it for the benefit of the nation. The arrest and harassment
of journalists from the private Press under this Act and the Public
Order and Security Act is clear evidence of this agenda.
As a result, MMPZ believes that the commission in its present form
commands no credibility.
MMPZ therefore calls on government to repeal this prohibitive law
and recognize the public's rights to freedom of expression and the
essential role that the free flow of information plays in promoting
national social, economic and political development. MMPZ believes
that the establishment of a statutory commission to encourage ethical
journalistic practice is unnecessary and restrictive and calls on
government to support existing efforts to establish the formation
of a voluntary media council representative of media and civic interests.
For more information, please contact:
The Project
Coordinator,
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe, 15 Duthie Avenue, Alexandra Park,
Harare, Tel/fax: 263 4 703702,
E-mail: monitors@mweb.co.zw
Web: http://www.mmpz.org.zw
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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