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New
press freedom blow
Institute
of War and Peace Reporting
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 11, 01-Mar-05)
By Ben
Takawira in Harare
March
01, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_011_2_eng.txt
The Zimbabwean
government has forced the closure of the Weekly Times, an independent
publication less than eight weeks old, making it the fourth private
newspaper to be pushed off the streets in the past eighteen months
under the country’s harsh media laws.
With parliamentary
elections less than five weeks way, Tafataona Mahoso, chairman of
Zimbabwe’s Media and Information Commission, MIC, said the title,
which was closed last week, had violated its operating licence.
Mahoso, a fervent
loyalist of President Robert Mugabe and the ruling ZANU PF party,
accused the Weekly Times of "misrepresentations" and "partisan
political advocacy".
The weekly,
published from Bulawayo, the country’s second city, had built a
circulation of 15,000 after publishing just eight editions.
Weekly Times
editor Diggs Dube said Mahoso’s action was politically motivated,
with the intention of stifling debate in advance of the March 31
poll. "There’s absolutely no freedom of the press in Zimbabwe,"
he said.
Owner Godfrey
Ncube said, "This is a political move. It’s got nothing to
do with the law. There is no legal basis for closing us down."
Ncube went on
to accuse Mahoso of being a tribalist as well as a Mugabe loyalist.
"He is a tribalist we should get rid of," said Ncube.
"I hope the new minister of information will get rid of persons
such as Mahoso and impotent organisations such as the MIC [Mugabe
has just sacked his minister of information, Jonathan Moyo, and
a replacement has yet to be appointed]."
Ncube is a member
of the Ndebele, Zimbabwe’s minority tribal grouping, and Bulawayo
is situated in Matabeleland, the heartland of the Ndebeles. Mahoso,
like Mugabe, is a member of the Shona ethnic group, who comprise
nearly eighty per cent of Zimbabwe’s population.
Foster Dongozi,
secretary-general of the Zimbabwe Union of Journalists, said he
was gravely concerned at the closure of yet another independent
newspaper. "This just shows how insensitive the authorities
are," he told IWPR. "The closure will see many journalists
losing their jobs at a time when unemployment and destitution is
on the increase."
Thomas Deve,
the Zimbabwe chairman of the Media Institute of Southern Africa,
MISA, a non-governmental organisation dedicated to promoting a free
press in eleven southern African countries, said it would intensify
its challenge to the draconian Access to Information and Privacy
Act, AIPPA, the legislation under which Tafataona Mahoso banned
the Weekly News, in an effort to allow the newspaper to begin publishing
again.
AIPPA effectively
makes the continued publication of newspapers and the practice of
journalism contingent on the whim of Mahoso and Mugabe. To secure
the legal right to publish or work as a journalist, applications
have to be made to Mahoso, well known among Zimbabwe’s media as
the president’s hatchet man, unfailingly diligent in instituting
repressive state policies. AIPPA states that journalists who work
without the approval of the MIC’s Mahoso can be imprisoned for two
years.
Media organisations
around the world protested against the closure of the Weekly Times.
Reporters Without Borders, the Paris-based organisation dedicated
to international press freedom and the protection of journalists,
said, "As usual, the Zimbabwean authorities find any old pretext
for gagging independent media that might spoil things for them at
the height of an election campaign.
"The government
does not hesitate to step up repression one month before the March
31 parliamentary election, although it ratified the Southern African
Development Community’s protocol on principles and rules for democratic
elections which ought, in theory, to guarantee press freedom."
The crackdown
on the newspaper followed intimidation two weeks ago of four Zimbabwean
journalists, three of them representing foreign news organisations,
who were forced to flee the country or face imprisonment.
Mahoso said
he was justified in using AIPPA to close the Weekly Times because
its "core values, convictions and overall thrust were narrowly
political, clearly partisan and even separatist". He said the
newspaper had "hoaxed" his commission in its licence application
by saying it would focus on development journalism. The Weekly Times
joins The Daily News, The Daily News on Sunday and The Tribune,
another weekly, in the stable of independent newspapers closed down
by the MIC.
The final issue
of the Weekly Times carried a front-page story about the disappearance
of valuable timber-processing equipment from a government depot.
A full-page advertisement inside the newspaper, placed by the National
Constitutional Assembly, grouping many pro-democracy organisations,
denounced the approaching election as a "fraudulent exercise
that will neither be free nor fair".
Mugabe’s government
owns the country’s three daily newspapers, which have prevented
opposition movements placing political advertisements in the titles.
The government also controls all radio and television stations.
*Ben Takawira
is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
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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