|
Back to Index
AGM Communiqué
MISA-Zimbabwe
August 10, 2005
MISA-Zimbabwe
held its annual general meeting on 6 August 2005 with a call by
its chairperson Thomas Deve urging members to rally behind initiatives
towards the establishment of an independent self-regulatory media
council following the presentation of the draft Code of Conduct
to the government.
In his state
of the media address to the AGM, Deve said the envisaged independent
media council would go a long way in rendering ineffective the operations
of the government-controlled Media and Information Commission whose
partisan handling of media issues has seen the closures of The Daily
News, Daily News on Sunday, The Tribune and Weekly Times.
He commended
the Zimbabwe Union of Journalists, Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe
(MMPZ) and the National Editors Forum, which are partnering MISA
in spearheading the initiatives, for adopting and endorsing the
draft Code of Conduct as the precursor to the establishment of the
independent media council.
"The draft
document which was adopted and endorsed by the ZUJ executive is
now our major campaign tool for the introduction of a self regulated
media council," Deve said.
"In this
regard we are expected to play a major role in complementing the
efforts by ZUJ. I therefore, appeal to our advocacy committees to
revalidate the contents of the Code of Conduct and help in ensuring
that we solidly stand behind all efforts to institutionalise the
self-regulatory council."
This initiative
should not be derailed especially at a time when the government
through the new Minister of Information and Publicity, Dr Tichaona
Jokonya, has welcomed the advances towards the establishment of
the envisaged media council following a meeting with him and his
senior officials under the auspices of the Media Alliance of Zimbabwe
(MAZ). MAZ is made up of MISA, ZUJ and MMPZ.
While he welcomed
the new minister’s willingness to engage with the media as offering
light at the end of the tunnel, Deve expressed concern that the
media environment remained restrictive through the application of
laws such as AIPPA, POSA and the Broadcasting Services Act (BSA).
"Our position
is very clear, AIPPA is a bad law that has seen us lose four newspapers.
Our members have experienced humiliation and harassment at the hands
of law enforcement agents. Several of our members have been dragged
before the courts of law while our offices have almost been reduced
to a legal aid clinic because of the number of journalists who visit
us seeking legal assistance."
This had resulted
in the setting up of the Media Lawyers Network to co-ordinate MISA-Zimbabwe’s
efforts to legally assist journalists who would have fallen foul
of the restrictive media laws throughout the country.
MISA-Zimbabwe,
Deve said, remains unshaken in its assertions that laws such as
AIPPA, POSA and BSA only help in reducing Zimbabwe’s democratic
credentials.
Noting that
the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings (ZBH) continues to serve parochial
interests, he said MISA-Zimbabwe would intensify its campaigns not
only to free the airwaves through its Community Radio Initiatives
but to ensure that ZBH is transformed into a truly independent public
broadcaster.
"This area,
in our opinion, remains critical for our advocacy and social mobilisation
work."
On the issue
of MISA-Zimbabwe being attacked as an agent of Western powers because
it was foreign-funded, the MISA chairperson said there was nothing
sinister about its funding as the organisation always presents its
audited accounts at its AGMs.
"We reiterate
that we are a Zimbabwean outfit whose ideals arise from global concerns
for media freedom with special focus on addressing the needs of
Zimbabweans using Zimbabwean human resources."
Urging media
practitioners to conduct self-introspection where it concerns their
professional conduct and ethics, he assured its membership that
MISA-Zimbabwe would not be deterred from continuing to fight for
media freedom and freedom of expression.
"No one
gives you freedom on a platter. Let us continue the fight by any
means necessary within the law," said Deve.
Meanwhile, the
AGM agreed with immediate effect to review upwards the MISA membership
fee of $12 000 annually to $200 000, $150 000 and $100 000 for its
working members, free-lance journalists and students respectively.
The institutional membership fee of $120 000 was also increased
to $1 million annually.
Visit the MISA-Zimbabwe
fact sheet
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.
TOP
|