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ZIMBABWE:
High Court refuses to accredit Daily News journalists
Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
May 12, 2005
http://www.cpj.org/news/2005/Zim12may05na.html
New York – Zimbabwe's
High Court yesterday dismissed a request to accredit journalists
of the banned Daily News, according to news reports and CPJ
sources. The ruling came more than a year after the newspaper's
owners, Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), filed the application.
The judge said the newspaper's journalists could not be accredited
until the newspaper had been granted registration by the government's
Media and Information Commission (MIC). The MIC has thus far denied
such registration.
The Daily News, Zimbabwe's only independent daily, was closed
in September 2003 after the Supreme Court ruled that, under the
draconian 2002 Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act
(AIPPA), the paper was operating illegally. AIPPA requires all journalists
and media outlets to register with the MIC. The Daily News
initially refused to register and instead launched a constitutional
challenge to the law. On March 14 of this year, the Supreme Court
upheld AIPPA but ruled that the MIC must reconsider a 2003 decision
to deny registration to the Daily News.
ANZ director Sam Sipepa Nkomo told CPJ that the company had filed
a new application with the MIC on March 16, but that at a hearing
on May 5, the MIC had requested new documents. He said these had
now been submitted. ANZ lawyer Mordechai Mahlangu said that the
commission had demanded information beyond the legal requirements.
"This latest ruling makes clear that this entire legal process is
a farce designed to provide cover for the government's campaign
to crush the independent media," said CPJ Executive Director Ann
Cooper. "We call on the government to allow the Daily News to
resume publication immediately."
A crackdown on the independent press in Zimbabwe that started in
2002 has included the closure of four newspapers, including the
Daily News and the Daily News on Sunday, as well as
the detainment, harassment, and forced exiled of dozens of journalists.
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