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Radio
station vows to continue regardless of ban
Media Institute
of Southern Africa - Zimbabwe Chapter (MISA-Zimbabwe)
November 13, 2002
Gerry Jackson
the Station Manager of SW Radio Africa, a community radio station
based in the United Kingdom and broadcasting to Zimbabwe has vowed
that the station will continue broadcasting regardless of a government
ban prohibiting Zimbabweans working for the station from visiting
the country.
In an interview
with MISA-Zimbabwe on Tuesday 12 October, Jackson a veteran broadcaster
and former employee of the state owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
(ZBC) said that SW Radio Africa is undeterred by the ban and will
continue with its work as usual. "We are committed to continue as
we believe that we are offering an alternative voice since they
are no independent broadcasting stations in Zimbabwe," said Jackson.
Jackson refuted
allegations advanced by the government that the station is biased
in favour of the opposition and that it fuels "tribal" tensions.
Jackson said that they always endeavour to balance their reports
and seek government comment on many issues that they broadcast.
"We certainly try to call government officials and the police to
get a comment but they always refuse to talk to us," said Jackson.
Jackson added that they are broadcasting from London in the United
Kingdom because the Zimbabwe government has not licensed the operations
of private players in the industry. She added that they would be
prepared to broadcast from Zimbabwe once the law is changed to accommodate
private broadcasters.
The Broadcasting
Services Act 2001 is a restrictive legislation and under it no private
broadcasters have been licensed. A judgment in which Capital Radio
challenged the Act is yet to be delivered by the Supreme Court.
In an interview
with the state owned, Sunday Mail (10-11-02), the Minister of information
and Publicity Jonathan Moyo said that Zimbabweans working for the
station had lost their citizenship right because of what he termed
their negative campaign against the country. The broadcasters include
Violet Gonda, Tererai Karimakwenda, Gerry Jackson, Georgina Godwin,
Simon Parkinson, Mandisa Mundawarara and Graeme Counsel. The list
also includes the whole British cabinet, Members of Parliament and
other officials of non-governmental organization such the Zimbabwe
Development Trust and the Westminster Foundation. Lodewijk Bouwens
an employee of Radio Netherlands was also banned from visiting Zimbabwe.
Jackson said
that they are seeking a legal opinion on the ban, which she says
must be located in an existing law in Zimbabwe. "You can't just
decide to ban someone. You have to do that under a law," said Jackson.
In a statement
after the announcement of the ban, SW Radio Africa said that the
act was a "reaction from a regime intent on penalizing anyone who
supports democracy and freedom of speech". "The right to freedom
of speech is enshrined in the Zimbabwe constitution and that is
what we stand by. We will continue to give a voice to Zimbabweans
who are able to use the station to speak freely," reads the statement.
SW Radio Africa
also reminded the government that Graeme Counsel is unknown to them
and Simon Parkinson who was also identified as their employee works
for Highveld Radio in South Africa.
The ban on the
broadcasters has been described as an act of madness and unconstitutional
by human rights groups in Zimbabwe. The National Constitutional
Assembly (NCA) Chairperson Dr Lovemore Madhuku said that the act
amounts to deporting a Zimbabwe national. "This is an act of madness.
It amounts to the unprecedented and unthinkable act of deporting
a Zimbabwean citizen," said Madhuku. "It is beyond any shadow of
doubt unconstitutional and illegal even under our defective constitution.
It offends every notion of freedom and justice," said Madhuku.
The NCA chairperson
added that no government had the right to take away the birthright
of a Zimbabwean. "A Zimbabwean who commits even the most serious
crime can neither be deported nor deprived of his right to enter
or leave Zimbabwe. He or she only needs to be subjected to the due
processes of the law," said Madhuku.
Visit the MISA-Zimbabwe
fact sheet
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