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Politically
motivated rights violations
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-17
Monday
9th 2005 - Sunday May 15th 2005
WHILE Zimbabwe was applying to host the
next session of the African Commission for Human and People's Rights
(the Zimbabwe Independent 13/5), the media continued to expose the
on-going politically motivated rights violations in the country.
However, all the stories appeared in the private media, which carried
16 reports on the matter and recorded a similar number of rights
abuses. Six were on SW Radio Africa, three were on Studio 7 and
the private Press published the rest.
The stories included the harassment and
denial of food to MDC activists or those suspected to belong to
the party, the assault of Harare residents and the barring of opposition
and civics' gatherings. ZANU-PF members, the police, and traditional
leaders were all implicated as the perpetrators.
In one of the reports, Studio 7 (9/5)
reported that a traditional leader in Makoni North, John Rukweza,
had summoned four MDC officials to explain why they had organised
a rally in his area when the opposition party was prohibited from
holding meetings in the region. Reportedly, Rukweza claimed he was
acting on the instructions of State Security Minister and MP for
the area, Didymus Mutasa. In another story, SW Radio Africa (9/5)
revealed that students who were suspected of supporting the MDC
were facing similar harassment. The station reported that 13 Midlands
State University students were briefly detained by college security
details for allegedly singing pro-MDC songs in a college bus. They
were subsequently released after several hours and barred from singing
in the bus.
Further, SW Radio Africa (11/5 &
12/5), Studio 7 (13/5), The Daily Mirror (13/5)
and The Standard (15/5) reported on the violent dispersal by the
police of Mabvuku and Tafara residents who were protesting against
water shortages in Harare. In addition, The Standard exposed the
continued denial of food to suspected MDC supporters in the Masvingo
district of Zaka. The paper also reported on the police's raid of
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions offices "in search of any evidence
of foreign currency transactions". The government media censored
such reports.
But while the private Press and Studio
7 tried to seek comment from the police and some of the accused
in some of their reports, SW Radio Africa's stories were notable
for their lack of balance. The private radio station's reports only
gave the victims' accounts of events at the expense of official
sources such as the police. Neither would the station provide evidence
that it sought comment from the police or the alleged perpetrators.
It is imperative that the private media do seek comments from the
relevant authorities on such topical issues so as to jealously protect
their professionalism.
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fact sheet
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