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Dragged
off and deported
Steven Morris,
The Guardian (UK)
May 17, 2003
Zimbabwean
officials flout courts after seizing Guardian correspondent
The Guardian's
Zimbabwe correspondent, Andrew Meldrum, was deported last night
even though three separate court orders were made prohibiting his
expulsion. After spending 23 years reporting on the country, Meldrum
was manhandled into a car outside the offices of Zimbabwe's immigration
service, driven to the airport and put on a plane to London. The
foreign secretary, Jack Straw, led worldwide condemnation, saying:
"I'm very concerned at this case. Petty and vindictive actions
like this simply expose the Zimbabwe regime for what it is."Michael
Ancram, the shadow foreign secretary, said: "This is yet another
disgraceful action showing the lack of respect for freedom of expression
and speech of Robert Mugabe's evil regime. This is the act of a
dictator." A US state department spokesperson said the treatment
of Meldrum, an American citizen, "reflects ongoing erosion
of basic rights and the rule of law, and is yet another example
of the intimidation faced by journalists in Zimbabwe, who have endured
threats, arbitrary arrests and violence at the hands of the government
and its supporters."
Meldrum's wife,
Dolores, spoke to him on his mobile phone. "He told me the
immigration officials had covered him with a jacket, hooded-style,
and drove him around a dirt road. When they got to the airport he
was locked up in an underground room," she told Reuters. Meldrum's
lawyer, Beatrice Mtetwa, claimed his deportation signalled a "complete
breakdown of the judicial system and the entire state machinery".
The disturbing sequence of events began yesterday morning when Meldrum,
51, presented himself at the headquarters of the immigration service.
He was told that he was considered a "prohibited immigrant"
and "an undesirable inhabitant"and would be deported.
He emerged from the building surrounded by officials and police.
Meldrum shouted to waiting reporters: "I'm being deported.
This is a vindictive action of a government afraid of a free press."
He was manhandled by police officers, one of whom grabbed him by
the collar, and bundled into an unmarked police car before being
driven to the airport.
During the day
the high court in Harare issued three orders at three hearings that
Meldrum should not be deported. At the second of the hearings yesterday
afternoon Ms Mtetwa argued that the immigration officials were in
contempt for ignoring Meldrum's right to appeal a previous deportation
order last July to the supreme court. That appeal has still to be
heard. The state attorney, Loice Matamba-Moyotold, said she did
not know why the home affairs minister, Kembo Mahadi, issued the
deportation order because he had said it was not in the public interest
to disclose why Meldrum was deemed an "undesirable". Judge
Charles Hungwe said he saw no reason why the reporter should be
detained. "He must be able to enjoy his freedom," the
judge said. He said the state's reluctance to give reasons for Meldrum's
deportation left "suspicions in one's mind". After the
third hearing yesterday evening, Ms Mtetwa raced to the airport
and served the new order prohibiting Meldrum's deportation to Air
Zimbabwe staff. Though immigration officials rushed away when they
saw her, she also managed to serve the order on them. Nevertheless,
Meldrum was put on a flight to Gatwick. He managed to wave to friends
and make a phone call to reassure them that he was all right. Ms
Mtetwa said it was clear the state attorney and the immigration
officers were not acting independently.
The editor of
the Guardian, Alan Rusbridger, said: "The deportation of our
reporter Andrew Meldrum from Zimbabwe is a political act which should
invite the strongest possible condemnation from the international
community. "The Zimbabwean authorities have been persecuting
Andrew for the past 12 months and their determination to deport
him can only be interpreted as a concerted effort to stifle any
free press within the country. This is an extremely grim day for
Zimbabwe." The latest attempts to deport Meldrum began last
week when immigration officers arrived at his home after dark and
said he was wanted for questioning. On Tuesday Meldrum voluntarily
went to the immigration offices, where he was told he had been writing
"bad stories" about Zimbabwe. His residence permit and
passport were confiscated. He was subsequently told to appear at
the immigration offices yesterday. Johann Fritz, director of the
International Press Institute, said: "Meldrum's illegal and
unwarranted removal is yet another example of the ongoing attempt
by the government of President Mugabe to prevent information on
the appalling situation in Zimbabwe finding its way out of the country."
Paul Themba Nyathi, secretary for information and publicity for
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, described the decision
to deport Meldrum as "another nail in the coffin for press
freedom in Zimbabwe".
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