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Free
expression and access to information in Zimbabwe
David
Lush and Professor Tawana Kupe
Extracted from
Report on International conference
on media support strategies for Zimbabwe
November 30, 2005
http://www.i-m-s.dk/Media/PDF/Zimbabwe
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Rarely are the words
"Zimbabwe" and "crisis" found apart these days. Zimbabwe
has become the epitome of a crisis. Responses to crises tend to be short-term
and reactive. With further food shortages looming, the current humanitarian
crisis in Zimbabwe is likely to continue. Likewise the economy lurches
from crisis to crisis in apparent free-fall. Meanwhile, Zimbabwe’s political
crisis has all but come full circle, the current implosion of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) being the last act of a doomed transition
of power that started back in the late 1990s.
However, there is
no such crisis when it comes to freedom of expression and access to information.
Rather, the enactment of repressive legislation, the harassment of media
workers, and the frustration and closure of private media enterprises
that have accompanied the other crises are part of a continuum dating
back to colonial times, if not before. Successive governments have continued
a tradition of intolerance of diverse expression and suppression of information
using laws that date back to colonial times. Although resembling a crisis,
the current exodus of Zimbabwe’s media professionals from the country,
the State’s continued monopoly of the broadcasting sector, and the cannibalisation
of private newspapers by the ruling elite is but another chapter in a
sorry story that has required long term solutions for a desperately long
time. With little hope left in the foreseeable future for resuscitating
the limited form of media freedom known to Zimbabweans during the 1990s,
the time has come to take stock, rethink and plan anew.
Structural overhaul
Although standard at the time it was drafted in 1980, Zimbabwe’s constitutional
guarantee of free expression (Article 20 of the Constitution) is an artefact
of a by-gone era. Constitutions elsewhere in Africa are being reformed
explicitly to guarantee free expression, media freedom and access to information.
The contemporary benchmark for constitutional guarantees of free expression
and access to information is set in the 2003 Declaration of Principles
on Free Expression by the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights
(see Appendix A). The Declaration seeks to define in more depth the guarantee
of free expression contained in the African Charter on Human and People’s
Rights (Article 9), and can be used in judgement of cases brought before
the Commission and – once formed – the African Court on Human and Peoples'
Rights. Zimbabwe has signed the Declaration, and Andrew Chigovera, Zimbabwe’s
government appointed human rights commissioner, was actively involved
in the drafting and subsequent adoption of the Declaration by the Commission.
Zimbabwe’s current
constitutional guarantee of free expression has provided some defence,
notably when cell phone provider Econet won the right in 1997 to operate
on the grounds that the limitation of telecommunications operators was
contrary to the right of citizens to express themselves freely. In 2000,
the government’s monopoly on broadcasting was ruled unconstitutional in
a case brought by aspirant private broadcaster Capital Radio. It required
all of Econet’s corporate muscle and the dogged persistence of the company’s
owner Strive Masiyiwa to overcome the government’s attempts to block the
licensing of Econet following the constitutional ruling. Capital Radio
was not so lucky, and was hounded off air.
These cases were fought
by people with commercial interests in media and communications. There
have been few attempts to defend and uphold the right to free expression
of less influential and powerful citizens. There is awareness of, and
longing for the rights of free expression and access to information among
less influential people, but the majority of Zimbabweans appear to lack
knowledge about the laws that affect these rights (ACPD and MISA 2004.
See also ‘Community views on communication’ elsewhere in this document).
Not surprisingly, in the current climate of fear and intimidation, few
people are able exercise their rights. But what encouragement – through
legal action and support by those with more power and influence, such
as the media – have they been given?
The Constitution –
or at least the court’s interpretation of it – has proved less robust
in challenges to the constitutionality of sections of the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) and the 2002
Public Order and Security
(POSA) Act (see ‘Media laws in Zimbabwe’ elsewhere in this document).
Furthermore, the Constitution did little to rid the statute books of repressive
legislation inherited by the ZANU-PF government from its colonial predecessors
at independence. These antiquated
laws – the Official Secrets Act, Parliamentary Privileges and Immunities
Act and POSA’s forerunner the Law and Order (Maintenance Act) among them
- were used to criminalise free expression during the first two decades
of independence (Amnesty International 1995, MISA 1994-2004). AIPPA and
POSA are but additions to an armoury of repressive legislation in force
at independence, and systematically abused by governments ever since.
When these laws were ruled unconstitutional, as was the case with the
Law and Order (Maintenance Act) in 1994, the government reintroduced much
of the old law in the guise of new legislation, as was the case with POSA.
Zimbabwe has the dubious
distinction of enjoying a continuous tradition of developing, implementing
and perfecting legislation that restricts and seeks to close down the
democratic space, while the trend elsewhere has been to do the opposite.
Such a context has had and continues to have a damaging effect on the
media, and breeds journalistic practices that have polarised the media
industry. An overhaul of the Constitution is a pre-requisite for any meaningful
advancement of free expression and access to information. Even when the
current constitutional guarantee of free expression is adequate, political
bias within the judiciary makes its interpretation a lottery, and therefore
constitutional guarantees of the independence of the judiciary, as well
as public media institutions and regulators, are also a pre-requisite
for guaranteeing free expression and access to information. Such institutional
independence is defined in the African Commission’s Declaration of Principles
on Free Expression.
Constitutional reform
in Zimbabwe has been spearheaded by the National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA), and is based on the rejection, in the
2000 referendum, of the government’s amended constitution. This popular
rejection pointed to the need for a more broad based participatory approach
to constitutional reform. However, the NCA also needs to be aware that
the government driven approach was unsuccessful, in part, because the
final draft ignored the inputs of the public, and not necessarily because
the government’s draft was totally flawed. Some of the views gathered
by the discredited government-driven process could be used as a basis
to take the process forward through a new broad based participatory politics.
The NCA faces a test of its own credibility in trying to convince all
major political forces, including the MDC, to prioritise constitutional
reform over electoral contests. It is interesting to note that the MDC
President Morgan Tsvangari is talking about reviving the constitutional
reform process as his party falls apart, and the time may be ripe to revive
a broad based approach to constitutional reform.
Meanwhile, the Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ) co-ordinates the Public Information
Rights Forum, an alliance of civic media editors and information officers
in the Civic Alliance
for Social and Economic Progress (CASEP). The Forum seeks to represent
media consumers, and carries out civic education work on public information
rights issues. This may provide another launch pad for a much broader-based
campaign around freedom of expression and access to information.
Continued efforts
could be made to challenge existing undemocratic laws through the African
Commission, as a way of illustrating that these laws do not conform to
African values. And although the likes of AIPPA and POSA are extremely
restrictive, there remains scope for working within them, and challenging
their abuse through the Zimbabwean courts. Even the politically appointed
Supreme Court, when interpreting a weak constitution, ruled that the "false
news" provision of AIPPA was unconstitutional. On at least four occasions
in recent years, Magistrate courts have ruled in favour of media workers
charged under AIPPA. The Zimbabwean and Independent newspapers continue
to be registered by the MIC, despite being editorially critical towards
the government. So, in a similar vein, the Weekly Times might have been
licensed if it was up-front about its intentions to report on politics.
Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), the publishers of the Daily and
Sunday News, first chose not to register, giving the MIC an excuse to
challenge their subsequent registration bid. Notifying the authorities
of a change in shareholding, failure to do which allowed the MIC to deregister
the Tribune, is standard practice under company law. Yes, the laws are
restrictive, and keeping within them, looking at creative ways around
them, and challenging their abuse, is hard, time-consuming, costly and
sometimes dangerous work. But it is doable, as media in similarly restrictive
environments have shown. MISA has in place its media defence fund and
a network of media lawyers to assist. As a way of challenging the fear
that underpins the culture of silence that pervades Zimbabwean society,
greater efforts could be made to assist those with less of a commercial,
and more of a public interest in free expression to both understand and
uphold their right to free expression. In this way, free expression advocates
might be able to foster real public interest in free expression and access
to information issues, public opinion arguably being the strongest defence
of all.
Guns and microphones
Zimbabwe’s
liberation struggle witnessed an intense propaganda war with both the
oppressor and the oppressed using mass media to enhance their military
campaigns (see Frederikse 1983 for a detailed account). It was here that
the liberation movements ZANU-PF and ZAPU developed an understanding of,
and perhaps an appetite for the means of controlling the dissemination
of information:
"We beat the
regimes media campaign largely because their literature could not be
effectively circulated throughout the rural areas. They were unable
to distribute their propaganda on a personal basis, whereas ours was
being delivered door-to-door (by supporters and combatants)" –
Edison Zvobgo, then Deputy Secretary of Publicity and Information, ZANU-PF
(Frederikse 1983, p113)
The liberation movements’
use of media was prompted by the white minority regime’s own propaganda
efforts, particularly following the declaration of unilateral independence
in 1965. The regime started by jamming the BBC broadcasts from a transmitter
in neighbouring Botswana using a 400 000 watt American-made transmitter
– an ironic twist to the current government’s reported use of Chinese-made
equipment to jam the short-wave broadcasts of the London-based SWAfrica
radio, and Voice
of the People (VoP). The Rhodesian Broadcasting Corporation (RBC)
then established inside the country "African" radio stations
broadcasting on FM, and subsidised the manufacture and distribution of
cheap FM-only radio sets (Ibid p96). There was little difference between
the RBC’s approach to broadcasting, and that of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation after independence. At independence, the RBC changed its name
to the ZBC, and the political appointees of the RBC were simply replaced
by appointees of the new ZANU-PF regime (Maja-Pearce 1995:124-6). The
ZBC was governed by the same legislation as the RBC up until 2001. The
RBC was a state broadcaster par excellence - state driven and propagandistic.
The ZBC has never been a genuine public broadcaster and, as the political
and economic crisis deepened in the late 1990s, so its role as a state
propaganda tool became more and more unashamed. To the extent that opposition
and civil society voices are either completely excluded, or so selectively
quoted out of context that broadcasts have little resemblance to reality,
as was the case with the RBC. The ZBC has sought to promote national culture
and languages through locally produced programming, as a genuine public
broadcaster is required to do. But this is done in ways that advances
the government and ruling party’s political agenda, as did the RBC’s African
programming.
Therefore the culture
of propaganda the polarisation of information is deeply ingrained in Zimbabwean
mass communication culture. So too, it seems, is the combative role of
media. The MMPZ’s report on the media coverage of the 2000 General Election
has the ominous title of The Media War, and the language used in
the Zimbabwean media – not to mention the MMPZ’s own reports - is often
bellicose. More often than not, it simply echoes and amplifies – rather
than challenges or contextualises – the actual and rhetorical violence
of Zimbabwean politics. The divergent viewpoints of the Zimbabwean media,
and the polarisation of media workers into pro and anti-government factions,
further suggest the media has failed to evolve much from the preindependence
era.
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