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Zimbabwe:
MISA finds chaotic, hostile conditions for journalists
IFEX
COMMUNIQUÉ VOL 13 NO 32
August 10, 2004
Zimbabwe's elections
in March 2004 are unlikely to be free and fair as long as the government
keeps a tight rein on the media, a fact-finding mission by the Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) has concluded. Read
the report
A three-person
team made up of Botswana-based journalist Pamela Dube, Mozambican
editor Fernando Gonçalves and Zambian media lawyer Patrick
Matibini conducted a week-long mission to Zimbabwe in June 2004
to examine the state of the country's media and found an environment
chaotic and hostile to independent journalists and media outlets.
Their report,
"Fact-Finding Mission to Zimbabwe," reveals a country where news
media outlets have become polarised along political lines. "The
battle lines are no longer the terrain of the political opponents.
The media is the battle field.and journalistic ethics are being
compromised," it says.
The authors
of the report say state media, particularly the Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation and the daily newspaper "The Herald," issue "hate messages"
against perceived political opponents. At the same time, activities
of the political opposition are hardly covered. The authors say
they heard disheartening stories of journalists who had been fired
or denied employment for "daring to criticise" the government. This
has forced journalists to sacrifice professionalism and "toe the
political line" in the interests of staying employed in the media
sector.
According to
MISA's 2003 annual report, there were 102 attacks against journalists
in Zimbabwe last year, more than any other country in the Southern
African Development Community. This included arrests, physical assaults,
imprisonment and legal actions.
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