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Zimbabwe commission hounds unregistered journalists at arts festival
ZimOnline
April 29, 2006

http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=12032

HARARE - Zimbabwe's Media and Information Commission (MIC) is investigating journalists covering an arts festival taking place in Harare and could order the arrest of foreign and local reporters covering the event without its permission.

Under the government's tough Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), journalists and newspapers must obtain licences from the MIC in order to practise or publish in Zimbabwe.

Newspapers that breach the licence law face closure and seizure of their equipment by the government while reporters who carry out their work without a licence face up to two years in jail.

MIC official Munyaradzi Nyamagodo is said to be leading the probe into hundreds of journalists that have flocked to the popular Harare International Festival of the Arts (HIFA) and is said to have demanded that organisers submit to him a full list of all journalists covering the festival.

Both Nyamagodo and MIC boss, Tafataona Mahoso were not available to explain what had prompted the investigation or what action they would take against any journalists who may be found reporting on the festival without being licenced to do so.

But an MIC official, who did not want to be named because he is not authorised to speak to the Press, told ZimOnline: "It is easy to catch them. We are aware that all media personnel accredited to cover the event will have green bangles strapped on the wrists.

"We will target anyone with the green bangles and ask them to produce their MIC Press cards. Anyone found wanting would be arrested because they are in violation of AIPPA."

In a letter sent out yesterday to media houses covering the six day arts festival that began last Tuesday, HIFA media relations executive Jill Day alerts the news publishers that the MIC is probing the licence status of journalists reporting on the festival.

"Mr Nyamagodo from the Media and Information Commission has requested a list of all the journalists we have accredited to HIFA …. I am sure your accreditation with MIC is in order but I thought I should draw this to you attention," reads part of Day's letter to media houses.

Zimbabwe has some of the toughest ever media laws and is rated by the World Association of Newspapers as among the three worst places for journalists in the world. The other two are the former Soviet Union Republic of Uzbekistan and Iran.

Foreign journalists wishing to cover events in the troubled southern African country must first be vetted and cleared by the Ministry of Information and then they have to apply for temporary accreditation to the MIC and pay US$600 for a temporary licence.

Local journalists need no clearance from the Information Ministry but are required to fork out Z$250 000 if registering for the first time or Z$200 000 if renewing registration.

At least a hundred local and foreign journalists have been arrested in the past three years for breaching some of the government's harsh media laws although none have been successfully prosecuted.

The country's biggest and non-government-owned daily, the Daily News, was shut down three years ago and its equipment seized because it had not registered with the MIC. - ZimOnline

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