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Acquittal of Daily News journalists
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-40
Monday October 10th – Sunday October 16th 2005

THE media’s failure to inform the public of important developments has again been exposed by their “no-memory” coverage of news; in this case their failure to follow up on the trial of 44 journalists from the banned Daily News accused of practicing without licences, an offence that attracts a maximum jail sentence of two years under Zimbabwe’s repressive media laws.

As this report was being compiled, the international journalists’ watchdog organisation, Reporters Sans Frontiers, revealed (25/10) that the State had apparently “abandoned the prosecution” of the journalists after court officials failed to turn up for their trial on October 12th.

According to the international journalists’ watchdog, the Daily News staffers and their lawyer went to the court “but none of the court officials including the judge in charge of the case knew about the hearing”. It quoted an official from the paper’s publishers, the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe, saying the authorities were “too embarrassed to proceed with the prosecution” after the acquittal of the first Daily News journalist to be tried on the same charge, Kelvin Jakachira, and had therefore decided to “let the case slowly die a natural death”.

SW Radio Africa (26/10) picked up the story the following day while the rest of the media missed it. The fact that only the niche market radio station reported the matter clearly shows the adverse effects of repressive media laws, which have severely eroded media diversity, leaving the partisan government controlled media the dominant sources of information.

Instead of heeding calls to democratise the country’s media environment, The Zimbabwean (21/10) revealed that the authorities were instead employing unorthodox means to further choke the free flow of information. The London-based weekly reported an unnamed “intelligence source” alleging that government was “using sophisticated satellite equipment purchased from China” to jam broadcasts by the small independent radio station, Voice of the People. MMPZ’s own efforts to monitor the station’s signal over the past three weeks have been frustrated by a steady droning interference.

SW Radio Africa, which was forced to change its broadcasting frequencies in the run-up to the March parliamentary election due to jamming, first reported the issue about two months ago. MMPZ condemns these attempts to starve the nation of alternative sources of information as desperate acts of people frightened of the truth.

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