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Police
demand registration certificate from publisher/editor
Media Institute
of Southern Africa - Zimbabwe Chapter (MISA-Zimbabwe)
January 15, 2003
In a move that
is likely to signal the beginning of the harassment and arrests
of publishers and journalists over non-compliance with the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), police officers
from the Criminal Investigations Department in the city of Gweru
visited Willy Muponda the publisher of "The Sun" a local weekly
paper requesting that he produce his registration certificate. Senior
officer commanding that province later questioned him demanding
the registration certificate and information on the operations of
the community publication.
Muponda was
visited on 14 January by police officers who requested that he produce
the registration certificate by the end of the day. The officers
did not specify what would happen if Muponda fails to produce the
certificate.
In a telephone
interview with MISA-Zimbabwe Muponda said that when the police came
to his offices he was not around and he decided to go to the police
station today, 15 January 2003.
"The police
officers harassed me and asked me whether I had registered. They
demanded the receipt of the $500 000 registration fee that should
have been paid to the Media Commission," Muponda said.
Muponda also
informed MISA-Zimbabwe that the police demanded details of directors
of the paper and the certificate of incorporation of the publication.
The police, Muponda told MISA-Zimbabwe, told him that his paper
was anti government and queried a story the paper once wrote on
an incident in which a police officer was accused of having beaten
a civilian to death in the town.
Muponda said
he was questioned by the Officer Commanding Midlands province and
also the one commanding the police fraud division in the same province.
"I was surprised that such senior police officers questioned me.
I thought I would be interviewed by junior officers," said Muponda.
Muponda said that he feared for his safety and was at a loss on
what to do next. Under AIPPA the police are not empowered to demand
registration certificates from media houses but such a process is
initiated by the Media and Information Commission itself.
He said he was
informed that he was being watched. According to Muponda all community
newspapers in the province of Midlands did submit registration forms
minus the $500 000 required. Many of the papers are said to have
informed the commission that they could not afford the fee. The
deadline for registration was 31 December 2002.
For more information:
Rashweat
Mukundu Research and Information Officer MISA-Zimbabwe
E mail:
misa@mweb.co.zw
Visit the MISA-Zimbabwe
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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