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Government
draws up blacklist of people whose passports are to be confiscated
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
December 12, 2005
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=15882
Reporters Without
Borders voiced outrage today at the government's action in drawing
up a blacklist of some 60 leading Zimbabweans, some currently living
abroad, whose passports are to be confiscated and cancelled to prevent
them from travelling abroad any more. They reportedly include independent
newspaper owner Trevor Ncube, at least five other independent
media personalities, an expatriate lawyer and journalist, and the
owner and former executives of the banned Daily News newspaper.
"This new scheme is Kafkaesque," Reporters Without Borders said.
"How repressive can Robert Mugabe's government get before it is
called to account? Zimbabwe is a member of the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) and is under South Africa's influence,
yet it is not threatened with any coercive measure over its repeated
press violations. Action to help Zimbabweans recover their civil
and political liberties is long overdue."
In a letter from registrar general Tobaiwa Mudede to immigration
chief Elasto Mugwadi on 28 November, the government ordered the
withdrawal and cancellation of the passports of all persons on "the
following list." A local source said there were 64 names on the
list, including businessman Strive Masiyiwa, owner of the
Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), which publishes the
Daily News, former Daily News editors Geoffrey Nyarota
and Nqobile Nyathi, and Daily News reporters Lloyd
Mudiwa and Basildon Peta.
Beatrice Mtetwa, a leading lawyer who won the Committee to
Protect Journalists' 2005 international press freedom prize, and
former Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation journalist Caroline
Gombakomba, who now works for the Voice of America in
the United States, are also on the list, which was sent with an
accompanying memo to all border posts.
The measure follows an amendment four months ago to article 22 of
the constitution allowing the government to withdraw any citizen's
passport when there is reason to suspect they could harm national
interests, defence interests or the state economy when abroad.
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