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Mugabe's
latest excesses: ban on cricket journalists and 8 months jail for
remarks in a bus
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
November 26, 2004
Reporters Without
Borders said today the Zimbabwean government's attempt to ban British
journalists from covering an international cricket match in Harare
was "further proof" that Zimbabwe was "stuck in a
dead-end" and that it "deserves its reputation as one
of the worst violators of press freedom, in contradiction with its
international commitments."
The government
dropped its ban yesterday after a day-long standoff and foreign
pressure and gave the journalists entry visas to report on the England-Zimbabwe
match, set for today but now postponed. Those initially banned were
from the BBC, The Times, Sunday Times, News of the World, Sun and
Daily Mirror.
The incident
is the latest of 50 or so arbitrary measures, some of them absurd,
by President Robert Mugabe's government so far this year in its
efforts to clamp down on free expression. Other incidents include:
10 November:
A jobless man, Reason Tafirei, was arrested in Harare and sentenced
to eight months in prison or 140 hours of cleaning in a school for
remarks supposedly undermining the president's authority. He had
told fellow bus passengers that Mugabe was a dictator while British
prime minister Tony Blair was a liberator. An official of the ruling
Zanu-PF party who heard him ordered the bus driver to go to the
nearest police station, where Tafirei was arrested.
15 October:
As opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai left court after being cleared
of treason, Associated Press photographer Angus Shaw was arrested
by a stranger and bundled into a jeep without number-plates. He
was freed shortly afterwards without any formalities or explanation.
16 September:
The government-controlled Media and Information Commission (MIC)
ordered editor Chakaodza Bornwell, of the daily paper The Standard,
to hand over the negatives of pictures of Mugabe taken at the Harare
Agricultural Show the previous month. The paper ran a photo on 29
August of the president hoisting up his trousers, with the caption
"Smartening up". As the pictures were taken on a digital
camera, there were no negatives, but the commission continued to
threaten the paper with prosecution if it did not provide them.
10 January:
Zimbabwe Independent editor Iden Wetherell, news editor Vincent
Kahiya and two of the paper's reporters, Dumisani Muleya and Itai
Dzamara, were arrested and held for several days on the orders of
information minister Jonathan Moyo after the paper said Mugabe had
requisitioned an Air Zimbabwe plane while he was on holiday in Asia.
Moyo later admitted the report was true and thus not libellous but
claimed that printing a true story about the president was "blasphemous."
Also in January,
MIC chairman Tafataona Mohoso threatened The Independent with prosecution
for running an editorial that simply called Zimbabweans "an
unthinking lot."
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