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Another assault on media freedom and information rights
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-39
Monday September 27th – October 3rd 2004

AS this report was being completed, news of yet another assault on media freedom and information rights filtered into the public domain – no thanks to the government-controlled media, which simply censored all news of the arrest and detention of more than 50 civilians outside Parliament on Tuesday, October 5th.

The Daily Mirror (6/10) reported that its photographer, Desmond Kwande, freelance photographer Tsvangirai Mukwazhi and "another unidentified journalist" had been arrested outside Parliament while covering an attempt by the activist civic rights group, Women Of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), to deliver a petition to Parliament protesting against the provisions of the NGO Bill. Although the paper failed to identify the third journalist, international media named him as Reuters photographer, Howard Burditt.

Fifty-two women protesters were also arrested.

The journalists spent the night in police cells and were only released the following day without charge, according to The Daily Mirror (7/10). The women were still in jail at the time this report was sent for publication. The paper quoted Kwande saying the police accused them of being part of the organisers of the WOZA demonstration.

The journalists’ arrest comes barely two weeks after the detention of three other media workers from the Zimbabwe Independent.

The government media’s crude efforts to prevent this latest attempt to terrorize civil society and independent media workers from becoming public knowledge demonstrates once again that these organisations have no right to describe themselves as news organisations; their disdain for their obligation to inform the public of such important developments clearly establishes them as instruments of government propaganda.

The irregular arrest and detention of officially accredited media workers also demonstrates the government’s determination to gag alternative sources of information precisely to prevent important news from reaching the public domain. The silence of the Media and Information Commission over the journalists’ arrests and the government media’s censoring of the news clearly indicates an alternative agenda to its mandate of promoting and protecting the integrity and diversity of the media.

Instead, those who rely on the so-called media organisations controlled by government are being bombarded with propaganda about events affecting their livelihoods with almost no recourse to alternative sources of information.

During the week under review, Information Minister Jonathan Moyo was quoted in The Herald (28/9) defending the public broadcaster’s programming, saying it was meant to "preserve values (with) which the nation identifies itself" because "the celebration of British and American values in the local media would have made Zimbabwe more vulnerable, especially in the wake of attempts by the two countries to effect regime change in Zimbabwe".

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