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Radio
stations granted accreditation to cover elections
Media Institute
of Southern Africa (MISA), Windhoek
April 01, 2005
The South Africa-based
Talk Radio 702, and its sister station, 567
CapeTalk, were granted accreditation, late in the day on 24 March
2005, to cover the 31 March general elections in Zimbabwe. This
followed an initial refusal by Zimbabwean authorities to grant accreditation
to the stations.
Talk Radio 702's
news editor Katy Katopodis told MISA that the stations had appealed
to the South African Editors' Forum (SANEF) and the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs for assistance.
"Luckily our
deputy minister of foreign affairs, Aziz Pahad, intervened," she
told MISA, adding that three journalists are currently covering
the elections for the stations. Two of them are based in the capital,
Harare, and in Bulawayo, while the third reporter is moving throughout
the country.
Katopodis informed
MISA that the reporters have, to date, not experienced any obstacles
or interference in their work.
"Zimbabwean
officials have been extremely courteous and helpful. We're just
glad that we have reporters on the ground to report on the elections
there," she told MISA.
BACKGROUND:
On 23 March, the stations were informed that their applications
for accreditation had been turned down.
Last month three
journalists, Jan Raath and Brian Latham, who both work for a number
of British and South African news organisations, and Angus Shaw,
of the Associated Press, left Zimbabwe after their offices were
raided and they were interrogated by police about allegations that
they broke the country's media and security laws (see IFEX alerts
of 23, 18 and 16 February 2005). Following their departure, only
a handful of foreign correspondents remain in Zimbabwe, including
the tiny Reuters and AFP bureaus.
Earlier this
month the government-controlled Media and Information Commission
cancelled the "Weekly Times" newspaper's licence (see alerts of
1 March and 12 January 2005). This was the fourth independent newspaper
to be closed in Zimbabwe since 2002.
The "Daily News",
the "Daily News on Sunday", and the "Tribune" were all closed previously
(see alerts of 15 March 2005, 22 September, 15, 14 and 10 June,
11 and 6 February, 23, 22, 16, 13 and 12 January 2004, and others).
In January, President Robert Mugabe signed a law requiring journalists
to be accredited by the government (see alerts of 11 January 2005,
11 November, 18 October, 25 June and 6 February 2004, and others).
For further
information, contact Zoé Titus, Programme Manager, Media
Freedom Monitoring, MISA, Private Bag 13386 Windhoek, Namibia, tel:
+264 61 232 975, fax: +264 61 248 016, e-mail: research@misa.org,
Internet: http://www.misa.org
The information
contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of MISA.
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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