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MDC
congress and rights violations
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2006-13
Monday
March 20th – Sunday March 26th 2006
THIS week The
Financial Gazette columnist and former Media and Information
Commission (MIC) member Jonathan Maphenduka exposed how the government-appointed
commission conveniently misinterpreted the law and defied the Supreme
Court judgment just to deny the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe
(ANZ) an operating licence.
Maphenduka revealed
that despite the Supreme Court ruling that the MIC should "consider
the application on its merits and demerits", the commission,
"in pursuance of its agenda to frustrate" the
ANZ, "disregarded" the judgement and denied
the company registration on the basis that it had a "record
of operating without a licence".
However, he
observed, there is no provision in AIPPA, which "stipulates
that "records" of past infringement of the Act should
be used to determine the fate of application before the board",
a fact also "recognised by the Supreme Court in its judgement
of March 14 2005".
Further, Maphenduka
noted that the commission also misread the law by refusing to licence
ANZ on the grounds that it had violated AIPPA by operating without
a licence when a "breach of the Act" can
"only emerge after commencement of consideration of an
application by the commission".
He bemoaned
the MIC’s decision saying it has "prolonged the agony
and frustration the applicant has had to endure…"
In fact, the
Zimbabwe Independent (31/3) revealed that the ANZ had again
gone back to court seeking an order for it to be "deemed
registered" following the commission’s failure to comply
with a recent High Court ruling compelling it to deal with the publisher’s
application "within the timeframe stipulated by law".
The 30-day deadline
under which the commission was supposed to address the matter lapsed
on March 10.
It is such unjust
practices by the MIC that resulted in Swedish ambassador Sten Rylander
also criticising the commission, saying claims by its chairman Tafataona
Mahoso that the country’s media laws were similar to those of Sweden
were a "lurid comparison" whose "source"
remained "unclear" (SW Radio Africa 31/3).
But it was not
only independent observers who criticised Mahoso.
The Independent
reported that editor of the government-controlled Herald
newspaper, Pikirai Deketeke, had told a Parliamentary Portfolio
Committee on Transport and Communications that he disagreed with
Mahoso’s proposal that his board should be given more powers to
regulate distributors of foreign publications.
Reportedly,
Deketeke argued that "overregulating the media"
did not "bring any good" but "gave
the impression of a country that was keen to hide something".
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