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Zimbabwe's
exiled press
Elisabeth Witchel,
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
Extracted from Dangerous Assignments, Fall/Winter Issue
October 19, 2005
http://www.cpj.org/Briefings/2005/DA_fall05/zim/zim_DA_fall05_2.html
LONDON - Sandra Nyaira
was on a career high when she left Zimbabwe three years ago. For her work
as political editor of the country's leading independent newspaper the
Daily News, she had earned a prestigious Courage in Journalism Award from
the Washington-based International Women's Media Foundation. After traveling
to the United States to receive the prize, Nyaira attended the journalism
master's program at City University in London on a scholarship.
Nyaira expected to
be back at her job in Zimbabwe in a year. She has yet to return.
President Robert Mugabe's
government, after several unsuccessful attempts to muzzle the Daily News,
finally succeeded in closing the popular daily in 2003 amid an escalating
crackdown on the independent media. Family and colleagues warned Nyaira,
who had already been arrested once on criminal defamation charges, that
it would be foolhardy to return home.
Now Nyaira lives in
Somerset, England, eking out a living doing odd jobs. She wonders at age
30 whether the career at which she excelled-the one for which she once
risked her freedom-will be open to her again.
"We're rotting
away here," said Nyaira, referring to her exiled Zimbabwean colleagues.
At least 90 Zimbabwean
journalists, including many of the nation's most prominent reporters,
now live in exile in South Africa, other African nations, the United Kingdom,
and the United States, making it one of the largest groups of exiled journalists
in the world, an analysis by the Committee to Protect Journalists has
found. CPJ traveled to Johannesburg, South Africa, and to London, conducting
34 interviews with exiled Zimbabwean journalists, analysts, and human
rights advocates.
Some of these exiled
journalists left as a direct result of political persecution, others because
the government's crackdown virtually erased opportunities in the independent
press. Authorities have routinely detained and harassed journalists in
the past five years to quash reporting on human rights, economic woes,
and political opposition to the regime, CPJ research has found. Repressive
legislation such as the 2002 Access to Information and Protection of Privacy
Act criminalizes journalism without a government license.
The crackdown has
taken a devastating toll on Zimbabwe's independent media. Once home to
a robust press corps, Zimbabwe today has no independent daily newspapers,
no private radio news coverage, and just two prominent independent weeklies.
Journalists remaining in Zimbabwe are either without jobs in their profession,
or they work under threat of laws that, among other things, set prison
terms of up to 20 years for publishing false information deemed prejudicial
to the state.
Zimbabwean citizens
are denied access to diverse, questioning voices at a time when the Mugabe
administration, emboldened by this year's election victory, wields power
more aggressively than ever. For instance, the government's "Operation
Murambatsvina"-or "Drive Out Trash"-has destroyed the homes
and livelihoods of an estimated 700,000 Zimbabweans. Done under the guise
of urban renewal, the demolitions are aimed at breaking strongholds of
political opposition, critics say.
Spread as far as New
Zealand, the exiled journalists have made their homes among the estimated
three to four million members of the Zimbabwean diaspora. Unemployment,
political violence, and human rights abuses have fueled a steady stream
of emigration from Zimbabwe since the late 1990s, according to a study
released this year by the International Organization for Migration. The
survey of 1,000 Zimbabwean expatriates in South Africa and the United
Kingdom found that most are professionals, whose absence creates "concerns
for the longer-term future of Zimbabwe." Zimbabwe's exiled media
reflect similar patterns.
Journalists such as
Urginia Mauluka, a former Daily News photographer beaten and detained
while covering an opposition political rally in 2001, initially left for
temporary respite only to delay their return as press conditions deteriorated.
Others such as Abel Mutasakani, who left for South Africa in 2004, decided
that only by leaving their country could they honestly report on events
in Zimbabwe. And some such as Magugu Nyathi, whose newspaper, The Tribune,
was shut in 2003, saw no job prospects at home.
"As professionals
we said 'How do we continue?'" recalled Mutsakani, who served briefly
as managing editor of the Daily News until authorities shut the paper.
"I felt we had a choice. We could sit back in Zimbabwe, but that
would be tantamount to surrender," Mutsakani said. Instead, he and
several colleagues went to South Africa and started the Web publication,
ZimOnline.
But some did not have
the luxury of planning an exit. In February, three Zimbabwe correspondents
for foreign media outlets-Angus Shaw of The Associated Press, Bryan Latham
of Bloomberg News, and Jaan Raath of The Times of London-faced imminent
arrest after being accused of spying and publishing information detrimental
to the state. They left behind their homes, families, and decadeslong
careers.
Most journalists interviewed
by CPJ have found exile a bitter experience, even as they point out that
they have greater security than many colleagues back home. To penetrate
competitive media job markets abroad, many must secure work permits and
prove their qualifications anew. A few have secured jobs with international
media outlets, but most make ends meet by working in factories, service
jobs, or clerical positions.
"It feels very
frustrating. It is very, very difficult for a foreigner to break into
mainstream journalism here," said Conrad Nyamutata, former chief
reporter with the Daily News who now lives in Leicester, England. "Very
few of us have managed to get work in the field."
The emotional cost
is high as well. Dingilizwe Ntuli, a former correspondent for the Sunday
Times, said that adjusting to life in South Africa and leaving his family-
including his ailing father who died before Ntuli could see him again-had
thrust him into depression.
"When you are
forced to leave your country of birth, it is devastating," said Ntuli,
whose first name means "wanderer." Though he now works again
for the Times out of Johannesburg, Ntuli said he was out of the profession
and disenchanted with journalism for a long period. "I felt nothing
was worth living for. I gave my all to journalism and what happened? I
lost my home."
Zimbabwean journalists
in exile stand out in size and prestige-CPJ interviewed at least four
winners of international awards for this report-but their situation is
not unique. A crackdown in Eritrea and the threat of imprisonment in Ethiopia
spurred flights of more than two dozen journalists to Kenya, Sudan, Europe,
and North America. Communities of Burmese and Cuban journalists have been
publishing in exile for years, becoming valuable sources of information
on their closed societies. The exodus of Zimbabwean journalists has led
to the emergence of similar media-in-exile that strive to keep news flowing
about their homeland.
Behind the walls of
a nondescript office complex on the outskirts of London, Gerry Jackson
and her staff at SW Radio are fighting to broadcast within Zimbabwe. Jackson
started SW Radio in 2001, after the government closed Capital Radio, her
first independent radio venture in Zimbabwe. From London, SW Radio broadcasts
programs into Zimbabwe in English and in the Shona and Ndebele languages.
"Radio is such a lifeline to people there who feel forgotten,"
Jackson said. "It gives them a sense of creating dialogue."
But the station suffered
a major setback this year when the Zimbabwean government succeeded in
jamming its shortwave broadcasts. Jackson tried to overcome the obstacle
by broadcasting on multiple frequencies, but this costly arrangement proved
unsustainable and the station now sends programming online and via medium
wave-methods that draw very limited audiences within Zimbabwe, though
accessible to the diaspora.
In Johannesburg, working
in an office unmarked for security reasons, editors of ZimOnline focus
on getting breaking news out of Zimbabwe and into the international community.
Launched in South Africa in 2004 by Zimbabwean journalists and lawyers,
the site is intended to be a news service for international media to pick
up "the real Zimbabwean story," according to its managing editor,
Abel Mutsakani.
"No news groups
are allowed in Zimbabwe so news is not coming out from the ground,"
said Mutsakani, who relies on an in-country network of sources for information.
"We want to tell the story of ordinary people, especially black Zimbabweans,
who suffer the most from food shortages and unemployment."
Zimbabwean law does
not explicitly bar foreign publications from circulating without a license.
Wilf Mbanga, a cofounder of the Daily News, used that opening to launch
The Zimbabwean newspaper this year. From a small cottage in Hythe on the
southern coast of England, Mbanga and his wife produce the weekly, which
the couple said has a circulation of 30,000 in the United Kingdom, South
Africa, and in Zimbabwe. The paper relies on largely unpaid contributions
by Zimbabwean journalists in exile, as well as some anonymous reporting
in the country.
Mbanga, who left Zimbabwe
with his wife and "one suitcase each" in 2003 to take a fellowship
in the Netherlands, decided he couldn't return home after a story he published
on the militant activities of youth groups in Zimbabwe landed him the
official status of "enemy of the people."
"While I was
in the Netherlands I felt cut off from news at home," he said. "I
realized I would have liked a newspaper with Zimbabwean news available
for the diaspora."
Media-in-exile also
include Studio Seven, a radio service on the U.S.-government funded Voice
of America in Washington that is staffed mainly by exiled Zimbabwean journalists.
An online version of the Daily News is produced out of South Africa, while
NewZimbabwe.com, featuring tabloid-style news and commentary online, is
produced out of Wales. In August, Zimbabwean journalists in London launched
Zimbeat.com, a news, culture, and commentary Web site.
Mugabe's government
has taken notice. The state-owned Herald newspaper has published articles
lambasting The Zimbabwean as "a propaganda tool for the former colonial
power Britain."
Despite their growth,
the exile media face serious challenges. Reliant on private donations
and charitable foundations, with little or no advertising revenue, they
struggle to be financially viable. And while these outlets have had success
reaching the diaspora, their reach within Zimbabwe is limited to urban
and affluent populations.
With shoestring budgets,
limited access to government information, and few fact-checking resources,
some exile media also struggle to establish credibility. Pervasive anonymity
in their reports exacerbates the problem. To protect sources in Zimbabwe
and family members back home, many contributors to The Zimbabwean use
pseudonyms while ZimOnline does not use bylines at all.
"It is easy for
the government to discredit an unknown voice coming from so far away,"
said Geoffrey Nyarota, former editor-in-chief of the Daily News, who has
been in exile in the United States since December 2002.
Still, the exile media
play an important role for the diaspora. Daniel Mololeke, who recently
launched an organization of expatriate Zimbabwean journalists called the
Media Reference Group, said the exile media maintain unity and build identity
in the diaspora. "Media is the glue that holds Zimbabweans living
outside their country together," said Mololeke, a former lawyer and
now a columnist for NewZimbabwe.com.
Whether Zimbabwean
journalists become entrenched in exile appears closely linked to political
and economic developments at home. The majority of Zimbabwean exiles interviewed
for this report told CPJ it would take not only the end of Mugabe's rule,
but reform of the country's media laws, and a loosening of the ruling
party Zanu-PF's control for conditions to allow their return. At least
some, though, say they would return now if there were job opportunities
in journalism.
Nyarota, the former
Daily News founder and editor, said the return of exiled journalists is
important to the future of democracy in Zimbabwe. Nyarota, who hopes to
return home, noted that national elections in 2001, when independent media
outlets still dotted Zimbabwe's media landscape, were far more competitive
than this year's vote, when the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
was nearly shut out of press coverage.
Though critics accused
the Zanu-PF of manipulating this year's polls, "cheating was not
necessary for them to win," Nyarota said. The lack of media diversity,
he said, ensured the ruling party's victories.
For now, financial
and professional needs are plentiful, both in Zimbabwe and in the exiled
community. Scores of journalists in Zimbabwe have been left unemployed
in their profession by the closing of media outlets. Some exiled journalists
seek funding for new and existing media projects; others need professional
work, training, and education.
Nyaira and some of
her colleagues started the Association of Zimbabwean Journalists in the
United Kingdom as a first step in addressing those needs. "There
is no question- eventually people will go back," she said. "And
when we do, there will be a lot of work to do."
*Elisabeth Witchel
is journalist assistance coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Gretchen L. Wilson, a freelance journalist based in Johannesburg, contributed
to this story.
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