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Editor
threatened over presidential photo
MISA-Zimbabwe
October 01, 2004
Bornwell
Chakaodza, the editor of the privately-owned Standard weekly newspaper,
has been ordered by the Media and Information Commission (MIC))
to submit a negative of the photograph of President Robert Mugabe
taken at the Harare Agricultural Show this year in August.
The MIC ordered
Chakaodza to submit the negative by today (1 October 2004).
On 29 August
2004, the Standard published a front page photograph of President
Mugabe hitching up his trousers under a headline titled: Smartening
Up.
MIC chairman
Dr Tafataona Mahoso, claimed the Commission had received "numerous
telephone complaints" about the photograph.
Chakaodza told
MISA-Zimbabwe today that he found Mahoso’s demand bizarre. "This
defies words, I am lost for words. All I can say for now is that
this is a complaint from Jonathan Moyo (The Minister of Information
and Publicity in the President’s Office).
"In any
case, we will not be able to submit a negative of the picture because
our photographer used a digital camera. "I
think their suspicion is that we played around with the computer
to produce the photograph in question," said Chakaodza.
He said the
matter had been referred to their lawyers who were going to respond
to Mahoso accordingly.
The negative
in question was requested for in a letter dated 16 September 2004.
In his letter
to the Standard, Mahoso enclosed a written complaint from "one
of the 10 or so complainants".
One of the complainants
is given as J Neusu from the Department of Information writing on
behalf of the Secretary of State for Information and Publicity,
George Charamba.
Mahoso’s letter
says the photograph sought to "caricature, belittle and undermine
the dignity of the Head of State".
In a final letter
of demand for information requested to assist with the investigations
dated 28 September 2004,
Mahoso warns
Chakaodza and the publishers of the paper, that failure to comply
by 1 October 2004, would compel the MIC to proceed against them
in terms of Section 50 subsection (2) and (3) and 52 of the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) as well as
Section 12 (b) of the Commissions of Enquiry Act.
Section 50 subsection
(2) stipulates that the Commission may require any record, including
a record containing personal information held by a public body,
to be produced as evidence.
Subsection (3)
says a public body requested by the Commission to produce a record
in terms of subsection (2) shall do so within a period of 10 days
from the day that such record was requested.
Section 52 deals
with the powers of the Commission.
During the past
week alone, journalists from the Standard and its sister publication
the Zimbabwe Independent, have been questioned by the police about
stories published as far back as February.
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