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Supreme
Court upholds repressive media law in "Daily News" case
Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
March 14, 2005
New York —Zimbabwe's
Supreme Court today upheld a widely criticized law requiring all
independent journalists and media organizations to register with
a government commission, but ruled that the Media and Information
Commission (MIC) must reconsider a 2003 decision to deny registration
to the banned Daily News and its sister paper, the Daily
News on Sunday.
The MIC will have 60 days to rule on the application, according
to local sources.
Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), which owns the two independent
papers, originally refused to register with the MIC, and instead
mounted a constitutional challenge to the 2002 Access to Information
and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which mandates registration.
On September 11, 2003, the Supreme Court ruled that ANZ was operating
illegally because it was not registered, and authorities shuttered
the Daily News and the Daily News on Sunday the following
day. ANZ subsequently applied for accreditation, but was turned
down. Police continue to hold much of the company's publishing equipment,
according to the Daily News' website, http://www.daily-news.co.za/.
"CPJ is appalled at the long-term, government-enforced closure of
Zimbabwe's only independent daily newspaper," said Ann Cooper, executive
director of CPJ. "The Daily News and the Daily News on
Sunday must be allowed to reopen immediately and unconditionally."
The Supreme Court ruled in ANZ's long-running lawsuit seeking to
scrap several sections of AIPPA; today's decision is the second
time the court has upheld AIPPA's constitutionality. In February
2004, the Supreme Court ruled against a suit brought by the Independent
Journalists Association of Zimbabwe (IJAZ), which argued that compulsory
registration violated journalists' constitutional right to free
expression.
In January 2005, President Robert Mugabe signed into law an amendment
to AIPPA that strengthened the legislation's already harsh provisions,
setting prison terms of up to two years for any journalist found
working without accreditation from the MIC. Two other newspapers
remain shuttered under AIPPA: the private weekly The Tribune,
which was closed in June 2004, and the Weekly Times, which
was shut down on February 25, 2005, after just eight weeks of publication.
"Zimbabwe's draconian media legislation, together with its security
forces' constant harassment of local independent journalists, has
made it one of worst places in the world for journalists," Cooper
said.
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 (x112) 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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