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Foreign
journalists still being detained
MISA-Zimbabwe
April
04, 2005
A lawyer representing
two British journalists being detained in Norton has filed an urgent
application with the High Court for their release after they failed
to appear in court three days after their arrest.
Toby Harnden,
chief correspondent for the London Sunday Telegraph and his photographer,
Julian Simmonds, were arrested in Norton, 40km outside Harare on
31 March 2005, the day Zimbabwe held its parliamentary elections.
The two were
arrested on charges of covering the elections without accreditation
as required under the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy
Act (AIPPA).
Their lawyer,
Beatrice Mtetwa told Reuters on 4 April 2005 that the pair were
expected to appear in court today.
"We were
supposed to go to court today but that never happened and we don’t
know why. The police officer dealing with the matter just disappeared,"
said Mtetwa.
"I have
filed an urgent High Court application for their release because
the 48 hours within which they should have been brought to court
have expired."
They risk two
years imprisonment if they are convicted in terms of AIPPA. George
Charamba, the secretary for information and publicity, on Friday
told the government-controlled Herald that the two had been arrested
for violating the country’s laws.
He, however,
said they would be deported. Zimbabwe has over the years arrested
or deported dozens of journalists and denied others entry into the
country under AIPPA.
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fact sheet
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