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ZIMBABWE:
Newspapers struggle to survive political and financial pressures
IRIN News
August 15, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48599
JOHANNESBURG
- Steep production costs and political pressure is making Zimbabwean
newspapers financially vulnerable, according to media sources.
"There are exorbitant costs involved. All of us [newspaper publishers]
have enormous debts - we owe money to the banks," said publisher
and editor Ibbo Mandaza.
"Newsprint accounts for 70 percent of our costs - it costs about
Zim $20 million (about US $1,100) a tonne and we require three tonnes
a day," noted Mandaza, head of the Southern Africa Publishing House
(SAPHO), which owns and prints the Daily Mirror and Sunday Mirror.
Escalating fuel costs and increasing salaries to keep up with the
high inflation rate have also impacted on the company's resources.
Besides the financial costs, Mandaza said he had to contend with
the psychological pressure of "safeguarding his journalists every
day" - he and two journalists from his publishing house were detained
in 1999.
This week Mandaza was busy fielding queries related to a controversial
news report claiming that the Mirror group, the Financial Gazette
and the suspended weekly, the Tribune, had either been bought or
approached with a takeover bid by the Central Intelligence Operation
(CIO), Zimbabwe's state security agency.
The report's claims have been shot down by all the publications
involved, but it highlighted yet again the vulnerability of the
media in a politically charged environment.
"I have a 100 percent stake in SAPHO - I own the publishing house.
We have in the past - i.e. before 2003 - received offers from several
people we found unsuitable; we have not received any offers since
then," Mandaza confirmed. "We might have CIO agents in my newspaper
and I will be unable to confirm that - I mean state security agencies
across the world have agents in the media - they are all over the
place."
Kindness Paradza, publisher of Africa Tribune Newspapers (ATN),
which used to print the Tribune newspaper, said in the past he had
also been approached with offers, "but I will not be able to confirm
whether they were CIO operatives - I wouldn't know".
Paradza has other pressing problems: he is fighting to keep his
business afloat after the government-appointed Media and Information
Commission (MIC) suspended ATN for a year in June 2004.
Last month the MIC turned down ATN's application to resume publication,
saying the company had failed to show that it had enough capital,
and because it intended operating from a residence.
"How was I expected to rent business premises if I had not yet been
given a licence? Anyway, I have gone ahead and rented premises and
met with all the requirements asked, and resubmitted my application
last week," said Paradza.
ATN shut down when 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 gone on sale on Fridays.
The one-year suspension was based on allegations of breaching the
Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which
stipulates that the commission must be informed of any changes in
the titles, frequency and ownership of a licensed media house.
"We realise the costs of running the operation - both financially
and psychologically - but we are journalists: we cannot earn a living
doing anything else," commented Paradza, who has been in the profession
for 22 years. ATN is owned by journalists, with Paradza owning a
90 percent stake.
The Media Institute of Southern Africa, a media watchdog, said controversial
legislation such as AIPPA had placed an additional burden on journalists
in Zimbabwe.
"They have to operate in constant fear of possibly breaching the
legislation," commented MISA's Nyasha Nyakunu.
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
owned two antigovernment papers: the Daily News, once the country's
largest selling newspaper, and the Daily News on Sunday.
Despite these pressures, Mandaza said his company had taken out
yet another loan to purchase a printing plant recently. "We hope
to divert some of the resources that we will now be able to save
towards increasing our circulation."
The public's "thirst for information" was what kept publishing houses
running, Paradza maintained. "Almost 80 percent of Zimbabwe's population
is literate. We already had our niche market because of our middle-of-the-road
stance" regarding the government. "With our belief in accurate reporting
we hope to maintain our readership - we believe you can do business
in Zimbabwe."
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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