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Commission
threatens one of the last independent newspapers with closure
Reporters sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
January 23, 2006
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=16205
Reporters
Without Borders voiced dismay today at learning that Tafataona Mahoso,
the head of the Media and Information Commission (MIC), recently
threatened the weekly Financial Gazette (FinGaz), one of Zimbabwe’s
last independent news media, with withdrawal of its licence.
The
threat was made after FinGaz refused to publish a note retracting
a 1 December article questioning the independence of the MIC, which
was set up to monitor and regulate the Zimbabwean media and which
has proved to be under the control of the government and the intelligence
agencies.
"The
MIC has closed down four newspapers in three years, and clearly
takes its order from the most senior members of the government,"
Reporters Without Borders said. "Reduced to functioning as
branch of the police, the MIC continues to impose the law of silence,
especially when a newspaper dares to criticise it. As the African
Union has apparently decided to try to loosen the vice-like grip
on Zimbabwe’s press, it should not let one of the last independent
publications be shut by Robert Mugabe’s and Mahoso’s thought tribunal."
FinGaz
editor Sunsleey Chamunorwa and his deputy, Hama Saburi, were ordered
to report to MIC headquarters during the week of 9-13 January. The
MIC is currently carrying out its annual reexamination of newspaper
licences and journalists’ accreditation, and Mahoso threatened to
withdraw FinGaz’s licence.
On
8 December, the MIC had ordered FinGaz to retract a report published
the previous week that the MIC originally agreed to grant a licence
to the owner of the now closed Daily News and then changed its mind
under pressure from the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO).
In its letter to FinGaz, the MIC said it would choose the journalist
who wrote the retraction. The newspaper refused to comply, and there
was no mention of the incident in the following issues, published
on 15 December and 5 January.
These
threats have come at time when information minister Tichaona Jokonya
has announced that Zimbabwe’s draconian press laws are to be amended.
The decision was taken after the African Commission on Human and
Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR), an African Union offshoot, issued a resolution
on 5 December accusing Zimbabwe’s legislation of violating basic
rights and civil liberties.
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