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US
Criticizes New Media Laws in Zimbabwe
David Gollust,
VOA News
January 11, 2005
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-01-11-voa92.cfm
The United States
Tuesday criticized an amended
new media law in Zimbabwe signed late last week by President
Robert Mugabe. The State Department says it will make the tenuous
situation for independent journalists in the country even worse.
The Bush administration
has been a frequent critic of the Mugabe government's repressive
approach to the political opposition and independent media, and
it says the new press law raises serious doubts about its commitment
to free elections in March.
The amended
measure, tightening restrictions in a sweeping 2002 press law, was
approved the Zimbabwean parliament after intense debate last November
and signed into law by Mr. Mugabe last Friday.
Under its terms,
journalists who work without a government license would be subject
to prison terms of up to two years. It also bars foreign journalists
from working permanently in the southern African country.
At a news briefing,
State Department Spokesman Richard Boucher said the existing law
has often been used to shut down the country's independent newspapers
and that U.S. officials believe the amended version can only make
matters worse:
"The steps raise serious doubt whether the government intends
to hold free and fair parliamentary elections in March," he
said. "Stifling free discussion of political viewpoints through
this law is inconsistent with election guidelines that were adopted
by the South African Development Community in August of 2004. So
we repeat our view that the government should allow independent
daily newspapers to reopen, and should lift licensing restrictions
on journalists."
The amended
new law has also been criticized by the New York-based Committee
to Protect Journalists, the CPJ. Its director, Ann Cooper, said
the group is deeply troubled by the measure, which she said will
have a further chilling effect on journalism in Zimbabwe.
The CPJ called
on the Southern African Development Community, and particularly
South African President Thabo Mbeki, who has been mediating between
the government and opposition in Zimbabwe, to hold that country
accountable to regional democratic standards.
Zimbabwean Information
Minister Jonathan Moyo has defended the press law amendments as
necessary to protect the state from attacks by its enemies.
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