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Zimbabweans celebrate New Voice
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 06, 11-Feb-05)
By Alison Freebairn in London
February 11,
2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_006_1_eng.txt
New publication
seeks to empower the diaspora and inform a population denied access to
information in the run up to the elections.
Award-winning Zimbabwean
journalist Colin Nyamutanba really began to worry about his safety when
he learned that his name was on a "hit list" drawn up by President
Robert Mugabe’s thuggish War Veterans. But when he found out he had also
been singled out by the regime’s Central Intelligence Organisation, he
knew that it was time to leave the country.
Three years to the
day since he arrived in London with his new bride and began a difficult
life as an exile, Nyamutanba is celebrating the February 10 launch of
a new publication that hopes to give a voice to the Zimbabwean diaspora
as well as inform those inside the country.
The Zimbabwean is
the brainchild of former Daily News managing director Wilf Mbanga, who
has been living in Europe for the past two years and is publishing the
paper from his home in the south of England.
It’s estimated that
as many as half a million Zimbabweans are living in exile in the UK, with
a further two million in South Africa. The paper, which has an initial
print run of 120,000 copies, will have a British edition and one published
in Johannesburg.
Mbanga is quick to
point out that the title’s role is not one of opposition activism. With
parliamentary elections scheduled for March 31, The Zimbabwean will seek
to provide balanced coverage of all platforms – even that of the ruling
ZANU-PF, which enjoys a monopoly on media coverage within the country.
"In Zimbabwe,
there is only one voice and all others are gagged, so it is important
that alternative viewpoints are heard," Mbanga told IWPR.
"If people are
to make a judgement they need to have all the facts at their disposal
– and we are going to provide those facts."
Mbanga has been founding
independent papers for the bulk of his professional life – moving on to
a new venture each time Mugabe’s government moved to close the previous
one down.
His last business
was the hugely popular Daily News, which was eventually shut down by the
authorities in 2003, following a calculated campaign of harassment and
violence against members of staff.
This is his first
foray into publishing as an exile and, aside from donations from two non-governmental
organisations in the Netherlands, it is being funded by the Mbanga family’s
life savings. Clearly a lot is at stake for Mbanga personally, but he
insists that many of The Zimbabwean’s contributors are risking far more.
Around 60 journalists
- both in Zimbabwe and in the diaspora - have offered their services to
the paper free of charge.
Mbanga is full of
praise for his "brave" team. "Even those journalists who
have come to the UK are still afraid of what the authorities might do
to them," he told IWPR.
"These people
have been threatened, dragged through police stations and beaten up just
for doing their jobs."
Mugabe’s introduction
of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, AIPPA, in
March 2002 had made life increasingly difficult for journalists, who were
then required to apply to a state-appointed commission for official registration.
Hundreds of them were forced out of work in this way, and many papers
– including Mbanga’s Daily News – were put out of business.
The situation has
deteriorated with the introduction earlier this year of a series of amendments
to AIPPA, which allow for prison sentences of up to 20 years for journalists
who write "falsehoods" which damage the reputation of the authorities
– and two years in jail for those who work without official registration.
While the diaspora
reporters may be out of any physical danger, there is no statute of limitations
or date of expiry contained within the act, meaning that any exiled journalist
who is deemed to have "defamed" the president or his government
could be arrested the moment they set foot on Zimbabwean soil, even decades
later.
As a result of this,
the bulk of journalists who have offered to write for The Zimbabwean –
including Nyamutanba – will do so under a pseudonym.
In spite of the risks,
exiled journalists in London, who recently formed an association, are
welcoming the opportunity to continue writing about their country.
"It is marvellous
for me to throw off the bloodstained clothes of AIPPA, that evil legislation
that affects every aspect of our lives as journalists," said Nyamutanba,
who still does not know for certain if he is facing criminal charges as
a result of his investigative journalism.
"This an opportunity
for me to contribute to the establishment of a democratic future in my
country, even though I cannot live there at this time.
"We need a return
to common sense and respect for democratic values in Zimbabwe," he
said. "If [we exiles] can contribute to this, it will be a honour."
As the AIPPA law stands,
papers published outside Zimbabwe do not have to be registered with the
authorities – but Mbanga is well aware that this may change at very short
notice.
However, even if the
print edition is eventually prevented from hitting Zimbabwean newsstands,
the title will still be accessible online from mid-March at its website
www.thezimbabwean.co.uk .
"This newspaper
is a fantastic project, and a fine example of the extraordinary resilience
of the Zimbabwean diaspora," said Nyamutanba.
"I really hope
that it will help the people inside the country by bringing them the information
needed to make an informed choice. With luck it will become a platform
for freedom of expression and offer everyone an opportunity to express
how they feel."
*Alison Freebairn
is an IWPR editor in London.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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