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Annual
Report on press freedom violations during 2002
Reporters
Without Borders - Reporters sans frontières
May
02, 2003
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Zimbabwe - 2003 Annual Report
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=6459
The situation went from bad
to worse in 2002. More than 30 journalists were detained and several
foreign correspondents were forced to leave the country. But the
independent and opposition press did not give up and continued to
report the abuses of President Robert Mugabe's autocratic regime.
The international community
took issue with Zimbabwe's worsening social and economic situation
and many human right violations in early 2002, referring often to
the particularly critical problems for freedom of expression. The
European Union adopted targeted sanctions on 18 February, banning
visits by President Mugabe and 19 other senior officials and freezing
their assets in EU countries. The United States adopted similar
sanctions a few days later. President Mugabe was re-elected with
56 per cent of the vote at the start of March.
The struggle continued between
the political and judicial authorities within the country. President
Mugabe, information minister Jonathan Moyo and the police constantly
targeted the independent and opposition news media with complaints
and arrests. The judiciary, especially the high court, watched over
journalists' rights and tried to ensure they were not imprisoned.
This resulted in an ambiguous situation in which journalists maintained
a substantial degree of freedom while being incessantly harassed
and threatened by the authorities and government supporters.
Tired of the harassment, a
number of journalists left the country to set up independent news
media based abroad. Two radio stations established in Britain and
the Netherlands beamed programming to Zimbabwe, incurring the wrath
of a government that was incensed by the existence of news media
out of its control. The information minister went so far in January
as to formally ask the European Union to put pressure on the British
and Dutch government to stop "sponsoring" radio stations broadcasting
on short wave to Zimbabwe, especially the Voice of the People and
SW Radio Africa . These two stations represented "the biggest threats
to peace and stability in the region," the minister claimed.
The Mugabe regime had its sights
on the foreign press as well. Several foreign correspondents were
forced to leave the country in 2002 because their accreditation
was not renewed. In January, the BBC vigorously defended its coverage
of Zimbabwe and urged the authorities to let its correspondents
work freely in the country. The government on several occasions
refused to issue visas to British radio and TV reporters. Many other
foreign news media and press freedom organisations, including Reporters
Without Borders, were also barred from visiting the country.
The hostility to foreign journalists
at times turned into a manhunt. The government daily The Herald
reported at the end of January that the authorities were on the
point of catching British and South African journalists who had
entered the country on tourist visas. "The net is closing on them
and we should be able to find them before the end of the day," said
George Charamba, an information ministry spokesman. The targeted
journalists left the country at once.
The radio and TV stations of
the state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) just relayed
government propaganda. During the campaign for the presidential
election in March, the bias in favour of the incumbent Robert Mugabe
and the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front
(ZANU-PF) was flagrant. ZBC put out dozens of reports denigrating
the main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
and its leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Two laws passed in 2002 made
it easier for the government to silence its critics. The Public
Order and Security Act and the Access to Information and Protection
of Privacy Act set heavy prison sentences for press offences, and
gave the authorities considerable leeway by defining the offences
vaguely. Almost any criticism of the government could be construed
as "publication of false information" or "abuse of journalistic
privileges," offenses subject to a sentence of two years in prison.
The United Nations special rapporteur on the right to freedom of
opinion and expression said on 1 February that these provisions
violated article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to
which Zimbabwe is a party.
Two journalists imprisoned
Moses Oguti, editor in chief of the Botswana-based magazine Trans-Kalahari,
was arrested and taken to Mutare prison (east of Harare) on 17 February
2002. He was not told of any charge, but the authorities said he
entered Zimbabwe illegally across the border with Mozambique after
being denied entry at a border post. He was freed on 23 April, after
65 days in detention, and given three days to leave the country.
Peta Thornycroft, Harare correspondent
of The Daily Telegraph of London, was arrested in Chimanimani (480
km. southeast of the la capital) on 27 March and accused of "false
news" and incitement to violence after investigating political violence
against the opposition MDC. A high court judge found the charges
to be baseless on 31 March. She was released and the charges were
dropped. A Zimbabwean, Thornycroft said she would sue the police
for unjustified arrest and imprisonment, and would also sue the
state broadcaster ZBC for reporting, while she was imprisoned, that
she used her reporting to try to destroy her own country.
32 journalists detained
A BBC contributor, Thabo Kunene, was detained for one hour on 29
January 2002 by police in Lupane (about 100 km from Bulawayo) for
"threat to the zone's security." Police confiscated a cassette.
Rhodeh Mashavave and Foster Dongozi of the privately-owned Daily
News and Cornelius Nduna of the privately-owned weekly The Standard,
were detained on 30 January in Harare when a dozen anti-riot police
dispersed about 40 Zimbabwean and foreign journalists who were demonstrating
against the new press law. They were held in a police station in
the capital and questioned by police for about five hours before
being freed.
Basildon Peta, Harare correspondent
of The Independent of London and general secretary of the Zimbabwean
Union of Journalists (ZUJ), was detained at Harare central police
station on the night of 4 February, accused of organising an illegal
protest on 30 January against the new press law. He was the first
journalist to be arrested under the new Access to Information and
Protection of Privacy Act. The charges were quickly dropped after
the attorney general said the law did not require a union such as
the ZUJ to get police permission to hold a demonstration. Peta resigned
as editor in chief of the Financial Gazette and fled to South Africa
on 15 February saying he no longer felt safe after being the target
of a series of attacks in the state-owned news media, which accused
him of exaggerating the length and conditions of his detention in
an article for The Independent. He was suspended as ZUJ general
secretary on 21 February.
Newton Spicer of the TV news
agency Spicer Productions was detained and his camera was taken
on 18 February in Harare when he was filming ZANU-PF activists throwing
stones at the office of the opposition MDC. The police said his
accreditation was not in order. He was released after five hours.
Two journalists with the same
agency, Edwina Spicer and Jackie Cahi, were arrested on 25 February
in Harare and held for 20 hours after filming the State House, which
houses the offices of the president. They said they were detained
because of the footage they took of opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai
going to a police station after being accused of treason. Edwina
and Newton Spicer, and Calvin Dondo, a photographer with the agency
Panapress, were detained when covering a demonstration on 6 April
and were held for several hours at Harare central police station.
Dondo was hit and his camera was seized.
Geoffrey Nyarota, managing editor of the privately-owned Daily News,
was taken to Harare central police station and questioned for three
hours on 15 April. He was charged with "publication of false news"
and "abuse of journalistic privileges," punishable by a fine of
100,000 Zimbabwean dollars (about 2,000 euros) and two years in
prison under the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy
Act. The charges were prompted by the newspaper's reporting of the
shortcomings and inconsistencies of registrar general Tobaiwa Mudede
in the presidential election. At a press conference on 10 April,
Mudede gave different results from those announced on national television
a few days after the polling, on 13 March, and had a Daily News
journalist ejected from the room when he asked the reason for the
changes. The next day, the Daily News headlined one of its stories
: "Mudede circus continues."
Dumisani Muleya, a reporter
with the weekly Zimbabwe Independent, was detained and questioned
for four hours on 15 April, and accused of " criminal defamation"
of Grace Mugabe, the president's wife, in a report that said her
brother had asked her to help in a labour dispute with a food industry
company. Iden Wetherell, the weekly's editor in chief, was also
charged on 17 April with "criminal defamation" and "abuse of journalistic
privileges." Both were released but the charges were maintained
and they were awaiting trial.
Daily News reporters Lloyd
Mudiwa and Collin Chiwanza were arrested on 30 April and The Guardian
of London's correspondent, Andrew Meldrum, a US resident of Zimbabwe,
was arrested the next day. Held in Harare central police station,
all three were accused of "abuse of journalistic privileges" for
reporting a week earlier that ZANU-PF activists had beheaded a woman
in a village in northwestern Zimbabwe. The Daily News had already
acknowledged there was no proof of the allegation and had published
an apology to ZANU-PF. The three were provisionally released on
2 May. Pius Wakatama, a political reporter with the Daily News,
was arrested and charged in the same case on 6 May and was released
the same day. A judge announced the next day that charges had been
dropped against Chiwanza. A Harare court found Meldrum not guilty
on 15 July. A few minutes after the verdict was announced, immigration
officers approached Meldrum, gave him an expulsion order, and told
him he had 24 hours to leave the country. The high court suspended
the expulsion order two days later on the grounds that Meldrum had
a right under the constitution to live and work in Zimbabwe. Mudiwa
had still not been tried at the end of 2002.
Daily News reporter Brian Mangwende was briefly detained by police
in Mutare (in the east of the country) and questioned about a report
on violence against teachers which said some teachers paid former
guerrilla fighters and young members of the ruling party for "protection."
He was released a few hours later.
Bornwell Chakaodza, editor
in chief of the privately-owned weekly The Standard and two of his
reporters, Farai Mutsaka and Fungayi Kanyuchi, were detained on
16 May and taken to Harare central police station. They were accused
of "abuse of journalist privileges" and "publication of false news"
because of reports in the newspaper on 12 May in which Mutsaka said
Zimbabwe had bought anti-riot vehicles from Israel to disperse opposition
protests and Kanyuchi said policemen had stopped prostitutes on
the street and then let them go in return for sexual favours. The
three journalists were freed the next day after each paid a fine
of 10,000 Zimbabwean dollars (nearly 200 euros) but the charges
were maintained against all three until dismissed by a judge on
4 December.
Bornwell Chakaodza and Fungayi
Kanyuchi were arrested again on 28 May and charged under the Access
to Information Act in connection with a damning report two days
earlier on abusive police practices aimed, they said, at intimidating
the privately-owned news media.
Zimbabwe Independent editor
in chief Iden Wetherell was summoned by police on 31 May and charged
under a censorship law banning obscene or pornographic material
because the newspaper ran a Reuters photograph on 17 May showing
Brazilian Amerindians playing football in their traditional costume,
almost naked.
Kenyan journalist Florence
Machio, coordinator of the online newspaper African Women, was briefly
detained at Harare international airport on 12 June because she
had no accreditation from the information ministry. She had to leave
the country the next day.
Several journalists were detained
and manhandled when police broke up an opposition MDC demonstration
in Harare on 16 June, arresting more than 80 persons. Two Daily
News journalists, reporter Guthrie Munyuki and photographer Urginia
Mauluka, and their driver Shadreck Mukwecheni were injured and their
equipment was damaged. Munyaradzi Gwisai and Newton Spicer of the
agency Spicer Productions and Stuart Mukoyi of Kuwadzana 3 were
also hit. The Daily News said the police had been waiting for the
journalists, and accused them of colluding with the MDC and lying
about police brutality. They were freed on 18 June at the same time
as the detained protesters after paying bail of 3,000 Zimbabwean
dollars (around 60 euros). The charges were dropped on 24 June and
a judge ordered police to return a confiscated camera to Spicer
on 2 August.
Chris Gande, the Daily News
correspondent in the southwestern city of Bulawayo, was summoned
on 3 July by police who formally charged him with "abuse of journalistic
privileges" and "publication of false news" because he had reported
that the family of former vice-president Joshua Nkomo had not been
invited to a government reception.
Tawanda Majoni, a reporter
with the Daily Mirror and former police officer, was detained by
police on 12 September for allegedly infringing the Police Act by
failing to resign properly before starting work with the Daily Mirror.
It was speculated that he had been detained because he had reported
that the national police chief was in poor health and unable to
work, a claim that had been denied. Majoni was released the next
day.
Two Daily News journalists,
reporter Henry Makiwa and photographer Aaron Ufumeli, and their
driver Trust Maswela were detained in a Harare suburb on 21 October
while covering a demonstration by students demanding the reinstatement
of a dismissed teacher. They were accused of inciting the students
to demonstrate and were held at the Mabvuku police post for two
hours. Police confiscated Ufumeli's film but they were not charged.
Journalists with the state-owned news media were able to cover the
protest with no problem.
Police detained reporter Henry
Makiwa, photographer Gally Kambeu and driver Trust Maswela of the
Daily News on 19 November as they were covering a demonstration
by residents of a Harare neighbourhood protesting against the rape
of a 13-year-old girl by the deputy principal of her school. They
were freed the next day. More than a dozen demonstrators were also
detained.
Five journalists physically
attacked
Patrick Kumbula, a cameraman with the state broadcaster ZBC, was
seriously injured by soldiers on 6 April 2002 as he was filming
a demonstration in Harare. Other ZBC journalists covering a meeting
of the opposition MDC the next day in Harare were attacked by a
crowd apparently angered by ZBC's pro-government bias.
Daily News photographer Urginia
Mauluka was hit by James Makaya, the main defendant in a corruption
trial, as she was taking photographs of him outside the Harare high
court on 6 May.
Daily News photographer Regis Tsikai was beaten up by graduates
of the ruling party's Border Gezi Training Institute on 3 October
when they noticed him photographing them filling out job application
forms. He was taken to a police post where he was released two and
a half hours later.
Pressure and obstruction
Vendors of the weekly The Standard in Kwekwe, Chinhoyi, Mvuma, Bindura,
Rusape, Ruwa and Hararewere all harassed during the month of January
2002 and were threatened with reprisals if they did not stop selling
the newspaper. Copies of the Financial Gazette were destroyed at
Harare airport.
On 10 January, parliament adopted the Public Order and Security
Act making "acts of terrorism" punishable by life imprisonment or
the death penalty. It also established a heavy fine or five years
in prison as the punishment for publishing "false statements," or
information likely to "promote public disorder," or "adversely affect"
state authorities or "undermine the authority of the President."
Dingilizwe Ntuli, a young reporter with the Sunday Times of South
Africa, fled from Zimbabwe on 13 January after being accused of
terrorism by information minister Jonathan Moyo during a television
programme. A month earlier, he had reported that army personnel
were mistreating the population in the southern region of Matebeleland.
Sahondra Randriamasimanana,
a Madagascan journalist with the magazine Capricorne who travelled
to Zimbabwe with the intention of vacationing with friends, was
denied entry by police at Harare airport on 24 January because her
passport said she was a journalist.
When two representatives of
the Zimbabwean embassy in Paris received the head of the Africa
desk of Reporters Without Borders on 29 January, they told him he
had been refused a visa because Reporters Without Borders was "too
critical" of Zimbabwe and had called for sanctions. They said they
had been told by Harare not to let Reporters Without Borders into
Zimbabwe.
The Access to Information and
Protection of Privacy Act, adopted by parliament on 31 January and
signed into law by President Mugabe on 15 March, required all journalist
to have a one-year, renewable press accreditation issued by a governmental
commission. Offenders could be sentenced to two years in prison
or a fine of 100,000 Zimbabwean dollars (about 2,000 euros). Only
Zimbabwean citizens and permanent residents were eligible for the
accreditation. Foreign journalists were henceforth allowed to work
in Zimbabwe for only a " limited duration" and only after being
approved by Zimbabwe's embassy in their country of origin. The new
law also made it a crime to report the deliberations of the cabinet
and other government entities.
A request for accreditation
by Sally Sara, a journalist with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation,
was refused at the end of January. George Charamba, an information
ministry spokesman, said she had made the mistake of coming from
a member state of the Commonwealth which had just condemned political
violence in Zimbabwe.
Two home-made incendiary devices
were thrown through the windows of the Daily News in Bulawayo on
the night of 10 February. A night watchman quickly put out the fire
and no one was hurt. At the same time, two other fire-bombs were
thrown at the premises of a printing press which had recently run
off some posters for the opposition MDC. The Daily News said that
ruling party activists had affixed Mugabe electoral posters to the
windows of its offices several days earlier, warning that they would
come back and burn the premises down if the posters were removed.
On 8 March, on the eve of the
presidential election, the government newspaper announced that journalists
would not have the right to attend ballot counting and that only
the presidents of polling stations would have the authority to allow
journalists to watch voting. At the same time, information minister
Jonathan Moyo said journalists who were not accredited would be
arrested and tried and it would be a long time before they were
able to go back to their countries.
A report by the Media Monitoring
Project (MMP) on the election campaign coverage of the state-owned
media, published in early March, said the state broadcaster ZBC
was guilty of bias and distortion on an unprecedented scale. It
said that of the 402 reports on the activities of candidates, carried
by ZBC between December 2001 and 7 March 2002, 339 (84 per cent)
focussed on the ruling party's candidates and only 38 (9 per cent)
focussed on the candidates of the opposition MDC. Of a total of
14 hours and 25 minutes of campaign coverage, ZANU-PF candidate
Robert Mugabe got 13 hours and 34 minutes of air-time (94 per cent)
while the MDC got 31 minutes and 30 seconds (4 per cent).
ZANU-PF activists attacked
Daily News vendors in Bulawayo on 19 March, destroying around 100
copies of the newspaper. Police did not arrest any of the assailants.
Two vendors were attacked the next day in Rusape (in the centre
of the country).
The state broadcaster ZBC announced
on 22 April that, as of the end of May, it was cancelling the arrangement
whereby it leased one of its two television channels to Joy TV,
the country's only independent television station. At the start
of May, Joy TV stopped carrying the BBC's daily news programmes
on government orders. Joy TV chairman Tony de Villiers resigned
a few days later because of the conflict with ZBC. He said the problems
started when Joy TV began running a political discussion programme
in which opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai took part.
The information minister named
the news media commission responsible for issuing press accreditation
on 1 June. Headed by Tafataona Mahoso, director of the Harare journalism
school and a friend of President Mugabe, it comprised two former
editors in chief of government newspapers, two academics and a retired
civil servant. The end of October was set as the deadline for obtaining
accreditation. It was illegal to work as a journalist without accreditation
after that date. At a meeting organised by the Independent Journalists
Association of Zimbabwe (IJAZ) on 29 June, 35 journalists resolved
to boycott this new system of accreditation, calling it unconstitutional.
Police and officials of the
Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ) raided the Harare office
of the privately-owned radio station Voice of the People (VOP) on
4 July, looking for a transmitter or any other broadcast equipment.
They found nothing because VOP's short-wave signal is broadcast
from a transmitter based abroad, but they took about 100 cassettes
and files anyway.
Precious Shumba, a journalist
with the Daily News, and Peta Thornycroft, the correspondent of
the Daily Telegraph of London, were taken hostage on a farm with
a farmer as they were interviewing him on 14 August. Around 100
ruling party activists surrounded the farmer's home, demanding that
the journalists be handed over to them, and manhandled the journalists'
driver, who was outside. The two journalists were released after
the party's leaders intervened, but they were advised not to return
to the farm.
A visiting correspondent of the French daily Libération was
denied entry at Harare airport on 26 August despite having accreditation
and a visa issued by the embassy of Zimbabwe in Paris.
The VOP office in Harare was
bombed in the early hours of 29 August when the only person present
was a guard. He said he was approached by three men, one of the
armed. Two of them prevented him from intervening while the third
threw a device into the office. The three then made off. The bomb
destroyed the roof and the radio station's equipment. In mid-September,
the information minister insinuated that VOP's office could have
been used by terrorists to store explosives.
The Harare bureau of Agence
France-Presse (AFP) announced on 6 September that the information
ministry had refused to renew the work permit of Griffin Shea, a
US journalist working for the agency. Shea had to leave the country
when his visa ran out on 14 September. The information minister
said foreign journalists could now only have work permits of up
to 30 days and permanent work permits would no longer be issued.
On 26 November, the minister refused to renew the accreditation
of AFP bureau chief Stéphane Barbier without explaining why.
Barbier left Zimbabwe at the end of the month.
The information minister accused
the privately-owned Financial Gazette of "treasonous" and "anti-government"
reporting on 28 October because of an article in the weekly's 24
October issue headlined "Mbeki plots Mugabe's exit," which said
South African President Thabo Mbeki hoped to bring President Mugabe
and the opposition together to prepare for Mugabe's departure in
2005. The report was a fabrication and "unlawful," the minister
said. The ministry's spokesman George Charamba said an opinion piece
in the same issue likening the Mugabe regime to Al Qaeda compromised
a democratically-elected government and was in breach of the country's
laws.
A group of some 30 police officers
threatened to arrest Blessing Zulu, a reporter with the Zimbabwe
Independent, and Pedzisai Ruhanya, editor in chief of the Daily
News, on 29 October as they were covering the funeral of an opposition
parliamentarian who had died while in detention a few days earlier.
Authorities prevented a company, Radar Holdings, from flying a group
of journalists from the privately-owned news media over the Chimanimani
region in eastern Zimbabwe on 29 October. The company had wanted
to show the extent of the destruction which a fire had caused to
plantations at a time when some provinces were threatened by famine.
Reporters Without Borders
defends imprisoned journalists and press freedom throughout the
world, as well as the right to inform the public and to be informed,
in accordance with Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. Reporters Without borders has nine national sections (in
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and the United Kingdom), representatives in Abidjan, Bangkok, Buenos
Aires, Istanbul, Montreal, Moscow, New York, Tokyo and Washington
and more than a hundred correspondents worldwide.
© Reporters Without Borders
2002
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