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Media
commission urged to bow to court decision quashing ban on newspaper
Reporters
sans frontières
March 15,
2005
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=12865
Reporters Without
Borders today called on Zimbabwe's government-controlled Media and Information
Commission (MIC) to "immediately" issue an operating licence to the company
that publishes The Daily News and The Daily News of Sunday and to accredit
all of its journalists, after the supreme court yesterday quashed the
commission's 2003 decision refusing to do this.
The press freedom
organization hailed the court's ruling on this point as "a victory" while
deploring the judicial system's slowness and the fact that the court refused
to recognize the unconstitutionality of Zimbabwe's press law.
"Above all, we want
to salute the courage and tenacity of those in charge at the Associated
Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), the company that produces The Daily News
and The Daily News of Sunday," it said.
"The MIC no longer
has any reason to refuse to let these newspapers reappear after they have
been gagged for two years," Reporters Without Borders continued. "What's
more, unless it wants to defy a ruling of Zimbabwe's supreme court, the
MIC must immediately issue accreditation to all of ANZ's journalists,
while the police must also immediately return all the confiscated equipment
to The Daily News and its legitimate owners."
The prolonged legal
battle between the independent Daily News and the Zimbabwean government
appeared to reach a conclusion in Harare yesterday when the supreme court
"set aside" the MIC's September 2003 decision to refuse the newspaper
an operating licence. At the same time the time the court upheld the draconian
press law known as the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy
Act (AIPPA), the constitutionality of which had been challenged by the
ANZ and several international press freedom organizations.
ANZ chairman Samuel
Sipepa Nkomo told Reporters Without Borders he was "disappointed" by the
supreme court's decision. "Justice delayed is justice denied," he said.
"While we are disappointed that the supreme court has been unable to accept
our challenge, our greater concern is that it took over two years for
this ruling to be handed down".
He added nonetheless
that, since the supreme court had recognized the ANZ's right to publish
The Daily News and The Daily News on Sunday, the MIC had "no reason" to
refuse to restore its licence and issue its journalists with press accreditation.
He said the ANZ would decide "within two days" whether to let the MIC
consider the original accreditation requests of submit new ones. The law
allows the MIC 60 days to take a decision.
Under the AIPPA, which
was adopted in 2002, news media and journalists are forced to register
with the MIC or risk being sentenced to prison. In its arguments to the
court, the ANZ said obligatory registration violated the freedom of expression
that is guaranteed by Zimbabwe's constitution and the 1948 Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, The Daily News and its Sunday edition, Zimbabwe's two
most widely read newspapers, were banned in September 2003, beginning
a legal battle between ANZ and the MIC that went from court to court and
reached the supreme court in February 2004. Facing enormous financial
difficulties and to avoid exposing its journalists to arrest, The Daily
News decided to stop publishing pending the supreme court's decision.
Drained by the cost
of fighting around 40 legal actions and prosecutions, the newspaper's
coffers are now empty. The ANZ stopped paying salaries in July 2004. Of
The Daily News' 167 employees, around 20 are still fighting alongside
the editor and his personal staff. No rent has been paid on the newspaper's
offices, which have been surrendered to their owners. The office of what
was once the country's biggest newspaper is now just a room inside the
ANZ's headquarters.
Leonard VINCENT
Bureau Afrique / Africa desk
Reporters sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
5, rue Geoffroy-Marie
75009 Paris, France
Tel : (33) 1 44 83 84 84
Fax : (33) 1 45 23 11 51
Email : afrique@rsf.org
/ africa@rsf.org
Web : www.rsf.org
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