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Secret
service blocked Daily News registration
MISA-Zimbabwe
December 01, 2005
Zimbabwe’s secret
service allegedly reversed a decision by the government-controlled
Media and Information Commission (MIC) to register Associated Newspapers
of Zimbabwe (ANZ).
The weekly Financial
Gazette reported in its December 1-7 2005 edition that impeccable
sources had told the paper that the Central Intelligence Organisation
had vetoed ANZ’s registration.
According to
papers filed in the High Court, Jonathan Maphenduka a former MIC
board member, said the media regulatory body had on 16 June 2005
agreed to register ANZ, publishers of the Daily News and Daily News
on Sunday.
The MIC reportedly
agreed that there was no legal basis to deny ANZ a licence.
The decision
was supposed to have been communicated to the public immediately,
but MIC chairman Dr Tafataona Mahoso, stalled presumably ‘to consult
higher authorities.’
The June 16
decision was taken simultaneously with the decision to deny another
publisher, The African Tribune Newspapers (ATN) a licence - a decision
which Mahoso communicated to the applicants directly.
Mahoso, however,
chose to wait for more than a month before proceeding with the ANZ
case.
"Notwithstanding
the attitude of the commission to the application of Associated
Newspapers of Zimbabwe, the executive chairperson, Dr Mahoso appeared
to me to be stalling on the matter and he demanded additional information
regarding the shareholders of the applicant.
"Dr Mahoso
took the view that the structures of the applicant were confusing
and it was necessary to clear this confusion," said Maphenduka
in an affidavit filed in the High Court.
The ANZ is challenging
the MIC’s decision to deny it a licence to publish its titles.
Maphenduka,
a veteran journalist, resigned from the MIC in August 2005 in protest
against what he described as the Commission’s ill-advised decision
to close down newspapers.
Maphenduka states
in his affidavit that minutes of the June 16 meeting had contrary
to normal practice, not been made available to him nor were they
adopted at a subsequent meeting.
In his affidavit
which is silent on the issue of the June 16 meeting, Mahoso says
all the commissioners including Maphenduka, agreed not to register
the ANZ.
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