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World
Journalists accuse Mugabe over new assault on press freedom after 3 arrests
International
Federation of Journalists (IFJ)
January 13, 2004
http://www.ifj.org/default.asp?Index=2186&Language=EN
The International
Federation of Journalists today condemned the Zimbabwean government's
latest attack on press freedom and independent voices, which has seen
the arrest of three journalists from a business and financial newspaper
in Harare.
On 10 January, the
editor of the weekly Independent newspaper, Iden Wetherell, news editor
Vincent Kahiya and reporter Dumisani Muleya were arrested by local authorities,
after the information minister, Jonathan Moyo, said their article had
defamed President Mugabe. The journalists had reported that Mugabe had
commandeered a passenger plane from Air Zimbabwe while he was vacationing
in Asia with his family. All three journalists appeared in court Monday
and were released on bail.
"This new assault
on one of the few independent publications in the country is yet more
proof of a systematic crackdown by the Mugabe regime on voices of dissent",
said Aidan White, IFJ General Secretary. "Without public access
to objective information, the door is open to human rights abuse without
scrutiny".
This latest action
follow months of attacks against the Daily News and its journalists, which
has been shut down for over four months and has remained under the constant
threat and intimidation of local authorities. Police occupied the newspaper's
offices in central Harare and its printing factory on 19 December after
publishers won a legal ruling allowing them to publish and on 9 January,
the high court again ruled that the paper could resume publishing but
police refused to reopen the newspaper's print works.
The Daily News has
been involved in a long-running wrangle with the authorities over registration
under a new media law introduced in March 2002 - Access to Information
and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) - which has been widely condemned
by press freedom groups worldwide and parts of which have already been
struck down by Zimbabwean courts.
"The action
against the Daily News is part of a long-running campaign against press
freedom that is now being widened," said White. "Journalists
throughout the region and around the world demand justice for our colleagues
in Zimbabwe. The international community must condemn the use of draconian
laws and arbitrary executive measures to silence opposition opinions."
Further information:
+ 32 2 235 22 00
The IFJ represents over 500,000 journalists in more than 100 countries.
Visit the IFJ website at www.ifj.org
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