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Extinguishing of alternative viewpoints continues
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2006-3
Monday January 16th 2006 – Sunday January 22nd 2006

THE authorities’ determination to extinguish alternative viewpoints was again illustrated by their continuing onslaught against the country’s few remaining independent sources of information.

The Standard (22/1) reported that the police had detained a former reporter of the banned Daily News, Sydney Saize, for "three nights" on "suspicion of violating the draconian" media laws. The journalist was only released after his lawyer filed an urgent application "to compel the State to bring" him to court. Reportedly, the State was "dragging its feet" in taking the reporter to court on the grounds that "further investigations were under way".

And as this report was being compiled the police charged six trustees of the privately run Voice of the People for violating the Broadcasting Services Act, which prohibits broadcasting without a licence (The Herald, SW Radio Africa and Studio 7, 25/1). The six were remanded on $4 million bail each.

Earlier, The Standard revealed that the police had "descended" on the homes of two of the trustees, Arnold Tsunga and Nhlanhla Ngwenya. According to the paper, when they could not locate the two they threatened to confiscate some of Ngwenya’s property and arrested two of Tsunga’s employees as "ransom".

While private radio stations carried similar reports the next day, the government media completely ignored the incidents.

Such repressive acts, aimed terrorizing those still working in the media and shrinking the country’s media space, further exposes official claims that Zimbabwe is a ‘mature democracy’.

In other developments, The Financial Gazette (19/1) retracted a story it published last December claiming that the Central Intelligence Organization forced the government-controlled Media and Information Commission (MIC) to overturn its decision to grant Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), publishers of The Daily News, an operating licence. The paper claimed that its story, which heavily relied on former MIC commissioner, Jonathan Maphenduka, and "impeccable sources" was "unfounded and baseless" because "at no time did the CIO influence the decision of the MIC".

However, SW Radio Africa (19/1) reported Reporters Without Borders alleging that the Gazette only apologised after the MIC threatened to withdraw the paper’s licence. Reportedly, the paper had initially refused to retract the story.

It said the MIC chairman, Tafataona Mahoso, allegedly made the threat when he summoned the paper’s editor Sunsleey Chamunorwa and his deputy, Hama Saburi, to his office as part of the commission’s annual review of newspaper licences and journalists’ accreditation.

If true, this exposes the MIC’s abuse of its mandate and vindicates calls for the repeal of the repressive media laws, under which the commission was established.

The Sunday Mail (22/1) also retracted a story it published in June 2004 claiming that the MDC had bribed "government and ruling party officials" to "return farms" to former white farmers in a "well-planned scam" meant to "reverse the land reform programme".

Notably, such unfounded conspiracies have been used to denigrate the opposition ahead of an election, only to be withdrawn months afterwards.

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