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Zimbabwe:
Crackdown on independent radio station
The
Open Society Institute
February 02, 2006
http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=31765
NEW YORK - In
an attempt to silence one of Zimbabwe’s last independent news outlets,
six board members of the Harare-based Voice of the People radio
station were charged last week with broadcasting without a license.
They could face up to two years in jail.
The charges came after police raided the Harare home of one of the
board members, Arnold Tsunga, and kidnapped two of his household
staff. The two were detained without charge for four days in an
effort to coerce the executive director of VOP, John Masuku to turn
himself into the police. Masuku was charged with broadcasting without
a license on December 23.
The board members David Masunda, Isabella Matambanadzo, Millicent
Phiri, Lawrence Chibwe, Nhlahla Ngwenya and Tsunga are scheduled
to appear in court in Harare on February 10. They will be represented
by Beatrice Mtetwa, a renowned Zimbabwean human rights lawyer.
The Voice of the People is one of a handful of independent news
outlets in Zimbabwe, where the government exercises near-total control
over the media. "Such a brazen assault on media freedom shows
the bankruptcy of the Mugabe regime, said Tawanda Mutasah,"
director of the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa, part
of the Soros foundations network. One of the board members facing
charges, Isabella Matambanadzo, is OSISA’s coordinator for Zimbabwe.
The Zimbabwean government, long hostile to its critics, appears
to be stepping up its campaign to strangle civil society and tighten
control over human rights groups. In a particularly troubling development,
on January 26, two days VOP board members were charged with violating
broadcasting laws, a man claiming to work for the Zimbabwe Military
Intelligence Corps visited the offices of Arnold Tsunga and said
that he had orders to assassinate him. Tsunga, who is the executive
director of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, was not present at
the time.
The government claims that the Voice of the People has violated
a 2001 broadcasting law intended to stifle any criticism of President
Robert Mugabe’s administration, believed by rights groups to be
one of the most repressive in the world. In fact, the Voice of the
People does not broadcast out of Zimbabwe, but via Radio Netherlands
in Madagascar.
The charges are the latest in a series of government attacks on
the Voice of the People, whose equipment and files were seized in
a government raid on its offices on December 15. Several VOP reporters
were arrested during the raid and released without charge after
four days in detention.
"Faced with such repression, and ever-diminishing space for
dissent, it is all the more important to defend one of the few remaining
independent voices," said Mutasah.
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