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Police
defer reporting conditions
MISA-Zimbabwe
September 28, 2004
The police
were on 28 September 2004 still to formerly charge Vincent Kahiya,
the editor of the privately –owned Zimbabwe Independent five days
after he was arrested on allegations of abusing journalistic privilege
under the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).
Kahiya, Raphael
Khumalo, the publishing company’s general manager, and reporter
Augustine Mukaro, were arrested on 23 September 2004 following the
publication of a story linked to the treason trial of Morgan Tsvangirai,
the leader of the opposition MDC.
The three who
were detained at Harare Central Police station were picked up from
their workplace in Harare at 10 am before being released around
4pm on the same day.
They were asked
to report back to the police station on 28 September 2004 after
the police had recorded their warned and cautioned statements accusing
them of breaching Section 80 C (ii) of AIPPA, which deals with abuse
of journalistic privilege.
Kahiya, however,
told MISA-Zimbabwe that the police had on 27 September 2004 advised
them not to report at the police station on the agreed date as they
were still working on the case.
"They told
us not to come today (28 September) or tomorrow but that they would
get back to us when they were ready after I had phoned them enquiring
on when exactly they expected us to report back at the police station,"
said Kahiya.
Section C (ii)
stipulates that a journalist who abuses his journalistic privilege
by recklessly, or with malicious or fraudulent intent, representing
it as a true statement shall be guilty of an offence and liable
to a fine or imprisonment of two years or to both such fine and
imprisonment.
On 30 July The
Zimbabwe Independent published a story which said judgment in the
Tsvangirai treason trial had been postponed indefinitely on 29 July
2004 because the assessors had not been given a chance to input
into Judge President Justice Paddington Garwe’s judgment.
Tsvangirai is
being accused of plotting to assassinate President Robert Mugabe.
Judgment has now been set for 15 October 2004.
Meanwhile, Kahiya,
former Zimbabwe Independent editor, Iden Wetherell and former chief
reporter, Dumisani Muleya, reporter Itai Dzamara, are on remand
facing charges of criminal defamation.
Dzamara co-authored
a story titled: Mugabe grabs plane for Far East Holiday" with
Muleya. The state alleges that the story is false and defamatory
to President Robert Mugabe.
Wetherell, Kahiya
and Muleya who are on $20 000 bail each, spent two days in police
cells after they were arrested on 10 January 2004 following publication
of the story. The four journalists are expected to appear in court
this Friday ( 1 October 2004).
Wetherell is
now the company’s group projects editor while Kahiya and Muleya
have since been promoted to editor and news editor, respectively.
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-Zimbabwe fact
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