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Media
commission chief urged to resign after allegations of political control
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
December 06, 2005
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=15824
Reporters Without
Borders today called on Tafataona Mahoso to step down as head of the Media
and Information Commission (MIC), which supervises the news media in Zimbabwe,
after a journalist who resigned from its board, Jonathan Maphenduka, alleged
that Mahoso takes orders from his political bosses.
In a written statement to the high court, Maphenduka claimed that the
board originally agreed to let the banned independent newspaper, the
Daily News, register with the MIC and thereby allow it to resume publishing,
but finally bowed to pressure from the Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) and reversed this decision.
"The MIC's loyalty to the regime was already obvious but now there is
proof that it is under the government's direct political control," Reporters
Without Borders said. "Its members, who perhaps still laboured under the
illusion of its independence, should publicly acknowledge this state of
affairs and dissociate themselves. And now he has been unmasked, Mahoso
must go."
The representative of Zimbabwe's journalists on the MIC board until he
resigned on 18 August, Maphenduka made his allegations in an affidavit
that was given to the Gill, Godlonton and Gerrans law firm on 22 November
and was then submitted to Rita Makarau, the Harare high court judge tasked
with ruling on the appeal that was filed in July by Associated Newspapers
of Zimbabwe (ANZ), the publisher of the Daily News and Daily
News on Sunday, after its request to be registered with the MIC was
rejected.
Maphenduka, who used to work for the Chronicle, a pro-government
daily, said the ANZ's request to be registered was initially accepted
by the MIC board at a meeting on 16 June. But Mahoso then allegedly decided
to postpone announcing this decision in order "to consult higher authorities."
Mahoso reportedly said there was a need to "clear up the confusion" in
the ANZ's organisational structure before taking a final decision. Despite
his requests, Maphenduka was never able to get a copy of the minutes of
the 16 June meeting.
At a meeting two days later, the MIC board members were asked to approve
the minutes of the 16 June meeting although Maphenduka, at least, had
not received them. Mahoso and MIC legal adviser Daphne Tomana then asked
them to reverse the 16 June decision and refuse to register the ANZ. "I
am convinced, however, that the approach and the eventual decision resulting
from it were largely political," Maphenduka said in his affidavit.
Maphenduka resigned from the MIC a month later in protest against the
"ill-advised and counter-productive" manner in which it reached its decisions.
Mahoso has responded with a statement denying that he ever receive Maphenduka's
resignation and accusing him of "bringing scandal" to the MIC because
he "has an interest" in the ANZ.
The allegations have stoked a controversy in Zimbabwe about the growing
evidence that the MIC, which was supposed to be independent, is in fact
directly dependent on the government. It has emerged, for example, that
the salaries of the MIC board members are paid by the Department of State
Enterprises and Indigenisation.
A milestone in the drawn-out legal wrangle between the Daily News
and the government was reached on 14 March when the supreme court quashed
the MIC's September 2003 ban on the newspaper, forcing the MIC to reconsider
the ANZ's request for a licence within 60 days. Although the deadline
expired on 15 May, the MIC waited until 16 and 17 June to consider the
ANZ's request, along with a request from The Tribune, a weekly
that was closed in June 2004.
Mahoso refused to make any statement after these two days of deliberations,
saying the newspapers would be told when a decision had been made, without
explaining what he meant. The MIC finally announced its refusal to give
the ANZ a licence on 18 July, as a result of which the ANC immediately
challenged the decision before the Harare high court.
The legal battle between
the ANZ and the MIC has gone from court to court ever since the Daily
News and its Sunday edition were banned in September 2003. In February
2004, the battle reached the supreme court, which took a year to issue
a ruling. Because of enormous financial difficulties and its desire not
to expose its journalists to the possibility of arrest, the Daily News
decided to stop publishing pending a resolution of the dispute
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