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Police
raid the Voice of the People radio station, arresting three of its
journalists
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
December 16, 2005
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=15924
Reporters Without
Borders said today it was appalled by a police raid on the privately-owned
radio station Voice of the People (VOP) in Harare yesterday
in which equipment was seized and three of its journalists were
arrested.
"Robert Mugabe's government is cracking down harder on dissenting
news media and, in the face of an economic and political crisis,
is behaving in an increasingly despotic manner," the press freedom
organisation said.
"After managing to resolve an impasse in the food insecurity situation,
the United Nations should take the issue of civil and political
liberties seriously and, right now, should at the very least insist
on VOP being allowed to resume broadcasting freely and should
demand the immediate release of its three journalists," Reporters
Without Borders added.
Armed state security agents raided the VOP office in Beverley
Court Building in Harare at around 6 p.m. yesterday saying they
were looking for broadcasting equipment and claiming that VOP,
which has been legally registered as a Communication Trust since
its creation in 2000, was not allowed to broadcast without a licence
from the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ).
Failing to find any broadcasting equipment, the police confiscated
the radio station's computers and arrested the three journalists
present, Maria Nyanyiwa, Takunda Gwanda and Nyasha
Bosha, who were taken to the Harare central police station.
It is not know what they were charged with.
VOP's programmes in shona and ndebele, Zimbabwe's two main
languages, are broadcast on the short wave from 7 to 8 p.m. from
a transmitter in Madagascar operated by the Dutch public radio station,
Radio Netherlands. VOP had to stop broadcasting from
Zimbabwe after its studio in Milton Park in Harare were destroyed
in an August 2002 explosion that was never solved by the police.
With the help of Chinese technicians, the Zimbabwean intelligence
services jammed VOP's broadcasts from 18 to 26 October of
this year. The jamming stopped after VOP switched to a different
frequency.
The raid on VOP comes soon after the government drew up a
list of leading government critics, including politicians, human
rights activists, lawyers and journalists, who are banned from leaving
or entering Zimbabwe. Customs officials have been ordered to seize
their passports.
Press proprietor Trevor Ncube, for example, had his passport
seized on arrival at Bulawayo airport in the south of the country
on 9 November. A resident in South Africa, Ncube immediately filed
a complaint before the Harare high court, which ruled in his favour
yesterday, saying the "invalidation or withdrawal or cancellation
of the applicant's passport is unlawful, null, void and of no force
and effect."
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