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ANZ
directors acquitted
MISA-Zimbabwe
September 21, 2004
Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe [ANZ]
and its four directors who were being jointly charged with contempt
of court and publishing The Daily News without the requisite licence,
were yesterday acquitted of the charges.
Harare regional magistrate Lillian Kudya
acquitted the four directors, Samuel Sipepa Nkomo, Rachel Kupara,
Michael Mattinson, and Brian Mutsau, and the company, at the end
of the State’s case after ruling that the State had failed to prove
its case against the accused.
The accused were being charged with contempt
of court and breaching Section 72 of the Access to Information and
Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).
Subsection (1) provides that no person
shall carry on or operate a mass media service without a valid registration
certificate, licence or permit issued in terms of this Act or any
other law.
Section 72 stipulates that a person who
contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence and liable,
upon conviction, to a fine not exceeding $300 000 or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding two years or to both such fine and imprisonment.
In addition to any fine imposed in terms
of subsection (2), and without derogation from any of its powers
granted under any enactment, a court convicting a person of contravening
subsection (1) may declare forfeited to the State any product, equipment
or apparatus used for the purpose of or in connection with the offence.
The contempt of court charges emanated
from judgments by the Supreme Court, the Administrative Court and
the High Court respectively involving ANZ.
The State again failed to state which
judgment the accused were allegedly in contempt of to substantiate
the alternative charge.
In her judgment, magistrate Kudya said:
"This is a case which had too many inconsistencies. The State
did not lead any evidence on the main counts or alternative charge
that this court could reasonably convict on."
The Administrative Court ruled on 23
October 2003 that the Media and Information Commission [MIC] was
improperly constituted and ordered the relevant authority to properly
constitute the body which should in turn issue ANZ with a registration
certificate on or before 30 November 2003, failure of which the
ANZ would be deemed registered.
ANZ proceeded to publish an issue of
The Daily News the following day on 24 October 2003 following the
Administrative Court’s ruling.
Commenting on Monday’s ruling by the
regional court, ANZ chief executive officer, Sam Sipepa Nkomo, said
there is now no legal basis to stop them from publishing.
He said they had been vindicated by the
courts as there is no properly constituted MIC to register them
despite the State having appealed against the Administrative Court
decision to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court is still to deliver
judgment in the matter.
The Administrative Court also ruled that
the noting of an appeal against its decision by the State would
not suspend the operation of its decision.
Nkomo, however, said there was a technical
hitch which preventing the ANZ from resuming publishing arising
from the MIC’s refusal to accredit its journalists which was still
to be decided in the Supreme Court.
The Daily News and its sister publication,
The Daily News on Sunday, stopped publishing on 12 September 2003
after the Supreme Court ruled that it was operating illegally as
it was not registered with the MIC in terms of the law.
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