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Three
journalists forced to go in purge of The Daily Mirror
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
March 08, 2006
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=16699
Reporters Without
Borders today condemned a purge being carried out by the government
within The Daily Mirror newspaper in which three journalists have
been fired or forced to resign by the Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO).
"The CIO's
behaviour is unacceptable," Reporters Without Borders said.
"Journalists are being offered the choice of conforming to
the government's dictates or leaving. The Daily Mirror was one of
Zimbabwe's last independent newspapers. The free press is being
stifled by the government, which continues to flout court decisions
and warnings from press freedom groups."
The CIO is deliberately
making it extremely difficult for The Daily Mirror's journalists
to work in order to get rid of the current staff and hire new journalists.
As result of harassment, Paidamwoyo Chipunza resigned on 6 March,
becoming the third journalist to quit the newspaper in less than
a week. She had worked for The Daily Mirror since February 2004
and was its representive in the Zimbabwean Union of Journalists.
Reporter Sydney
Kawadza was fired on 23 February while his colleague Takunda Maodza
was suspended because of his alleged "poor performance."
Various sources contacted by Reporters Without Borders said the
two had been treated in this fashion because of their articles about
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), including the
current dispute among its members. The CIO, which was opposed to
the management's decision to assign Maodza to cover the MDC, accused
him of being an MDC sympathizer.
The departure
of these three journalists follows earlier moves aimed at weakening
the newspaper. Editor Pattison Matsikidze was suspended in December.
The financial director of the group that owns The Daily Mirror,
Ngoni Mangadze, and his accountant, Francis Kutinhi, were fired
at the same time because they were recruited by Ibbo Mandaza, the
newspaper's founder and former editor.
The purge of
journalists being carried out by the CIO at The Daily Mirror is
targeted at those considered loyal to Mandaza. Despite a high court
ruling in his favour, Mandaza is still suspended and cannot work
as a journalist.
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