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ZIMBABWE:
Independent media's battle continues
IRIN
News
July 15, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48146
JOHANNESBURG - A Southern African media watchdog has renewed calls
for self-regulation of the Zimbabwean press, after a government-appointed
commission denied a newspaper permission to reopen.
The Media and Information Commission (MIC) declined granting a licence
to resume publication to Africa Tribune Newspapers (ATN), publishers
of the weekly The Tribune newspaper, saying the company had failed
to show that it had enough capital, and because it intended operating
from a residence.
However, the ATN publisher, Kindness Paradza, told the Media Institute
of Southern Africa-Zimbabwe that they had met all the requirements
for re-registration in terms of the Access to Information and Protection
of Privacy Act (AIPPA).
"The issue of whether we have enough capital to resume publication
does not arise at all, because there are banks that are willing
to grant us loans towards the re-capitalisation process," he
commented. Paradza denied he planned to operate from his home.
The MIC was set up under Zimbabwe's controversial AIPPA law to license
newspapers and journalists. In a high profile decision in 2004 it
denied a licence to Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), which
owns two anti-government papers: the Daily News, once the country's
largest selling newspaper, and the Daily News on Sunday.
MISA's Nyasha Nyakunu said it had been lobbying the government for
an independent commission, which would be run by members of the
media to regulate the information industry.
The ATN's appeal against its suspension is still pending a hearing
in the Supreme Court.
ATN was closed in June 2004 after the MIC ruled that it had failed
to inform the Commission that The Tribune - initially published
on Thursdays as The Business Tribune, and on Saturdays as The Weekend
Tribune - had merged into The Tribune, which had usually gone on
sale on Fridays.
The one-year suspension was based on allegations of breaching AIPPA,
which stipulates that the commission must be informed of any changes
in the titles, frequency and ownership of a licensed media house.
Besides the official daily The Herald, and pro-government The Daily
Mirror, Zimbabwe's press stable includes the privately-owned weeklies
The Financial Gazette, The Independent and The Standard.
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