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ZIMBABWE:
CPJ concerned about harassment of international correspondents
Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
February 15, 2005
New York - The
Committee to Protect Journalists is concerned that Zimbabwean police
repeatedly visited the offices of three senior freelance reporters
for international publications on Monday and Tuesday.
Officials first
said they were investigating espionage allegations against the journalists.
Then they claimed they were looking into the reporters' accreditation.
Finally, the officers said they were investigating whether a satellite
phone used by one of the journalists was licensed, according to
their lawyer, Beatrice Mtetwa.
CPJ sources
fear that authorities are looking for a way to silence reporting
to the outside world in the run-up to March 31 parliamentary elections.
The three reporters
are Angus Shaw of the Associated Press (AP) and Jan Raath and Brian
Latham, who both work for a number of British and South African
news organizations, according to Mtetwa.
"CPJ is disturbed
at this ominous development and calls on the government to cease
its harassment of independent journalists," said CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper.
During a first
visit on Monday morning, police said they were investigating allegations
of spying, according to Mtetwa. They later came back to inquire
about the journalists' accreditation. The journalists informed the
police that they had applied for accreditation but had not received
any answer from the government-controlled Media and Information
Commission (MIC).
In the past,
journalists in this situation could continue to work legally, but
the rules are ambiguous, according to local journalists. Zimbabwe's
draconian Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act requires
all journalists to be accredited with the MIC or face up to two
years' imprisonment.
On subsequent
visits Monday and Tuesday, police inquired about Shaw's satellite
phone and whether it was licensed, according to Mtetwa. They ordered
that Shaw, who was not in the office at the time, be present on
Wednesday to assist them with their inquiries.
CPJ is a New
York-based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard
press freedom worldwide. For more information, visit http://www.cpj.org
For further
information, contact Africa Program Coordinator Julia Crawford or
Research Associate Adam Posluns at CPJ, 330 Seventh Ave., New York,
NY
10001, U.S.A.,
tel: +1 212 465 1004, fax: +1 212 465 9568, e-mail: africaprogram@cpj.org
, Internet: http://www.cpj.org/
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