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Self
regulation - Yes, Statutory regulation - No
Nyasha Nyakunu,
MISA-Zimbabwe
Extracted from Monthly Media Alerts Digest April 2006
May 04, 2006
A leading human
rights lawyer Jacob Mafume on 3 May 2006 described Zimbabwe’s media
laws as obsolete and urged the government to enact laws that guarantee
media freedom as well as protect self-regulation of the industry.
Speaking during
the World Press Freedom Day celebrations in Harare on Wednesday,
Mafume said in terms of the Banjul Declaration on the Principles
of Freedom of Expression in Africa and the Windhoek Declaration,
it was "commonsensical" that journalists should self-regulate.
"If surveyors,
dentists and lawyers among other professions are self-regulatory,
the media can also easily self-regulate. There should therefore
be no debate on this issue," he said.
"We should
therefore come up with laws that protect self-regulation and constitutional
provisions that guarantee media freedom."
This year’s
celebrations organised by the Media Alliance of Zimbabwe which comprises
MISA-Zimbabwe, the Zimbabwe Union of Journalists (ZUJ), and Media
Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe, were held under the theme: Self
Regulation – Yes. State Controlled Regulation – N0.
The Alliance
is forging ahead with plans to establish an Independent Media Council.
Deputy Minister
of Information and Publicity Bright Matonga who was the guest speaker,
said the government fully supported the principle of self-regulation.
Matonga was,
however, non-committal if not dodgy, as to what steps the government
was taking to amend or repeal the offending sections of the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) to pave
way for self-regulation of the media vis-à-vis the existence
of the statutory Media and Information Commission (MIC).
This also comes
in the wake of a damning report by the African Charter on Human
and People’s Rights (ACHPR) on Zimbabwe’s human rights that also
urged the government to repeal AIPPA, the Public
Order and Security Act (POSA) and Broadcasting
Services Act (BSA).
Matonga who
was at pains to defend AIPPA could not be drawn into commenting
on why the government continued to retain confidence in the MIC
despite a finding by the High Court that its chairman Dr Tafataona
Mahoso was biased when it came to the impartial adjudication of
the legal battle by the banned Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe
to be granted an operating licence.
He also refused
to comment on unchallenged reports that the Central Intelligence
Organisation (CIO), had taken over the Zimbabwe Mirror Newspapers
Group, publishers of the Daily Mirror and Sunday Mirror.
MISA-Zimbabwe
Chairperson Thomas Deve said the reign of former Information and
Publicity Minister Jonathan Moyo which saw the closure of newspapers
under AIPPA and the retrenchment of seasoned broadcasters at the
Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings, was a legacy never to be cherished.
Deve said this
era had given way to embedded journalism, euphemistically referred
to as patriotism in Zimbabwe with some journalists being literally
turned into zombies.
"Our hearts
are still sore and many wounded souls still hope that justice will
one day prevail when such authors of poisonous … media laws will
confess their evil machinations before our own truth and reconciliation
commission," he said.
Mafume said
it was "nonsensical" to continue hanging on to laws such
as AIPPA, and BSA under the guise of protecting national sovereignty
particularly in this era of the convergence and divergence offered
by Information Communication Technologies.
The fallacy
of restricting media diversity and pluralism had been proved as
such through the coming on stream of online publications such as
ZimOnline and independent radio stations such as the VOA’s Studio
7 and SW Radio Africa which are all manned by Zimbabwean media practitioners
in the diaspora, he said.
These radio
stations and online publications which beam into Zimbabwe, were
proving to be much more popular that even government ministers were
keen to be interviewed by them, said Mafume.
"What it
means is that for one to establish a private radio station that
beams into Zimbabwe one has to do so from outside Zimbabwe or America.
"The media
is about business. This about the economy and the state should invest
in its own media.
"We need
to employ our own people in Zimbabwe in order to generate the revenue
that will drive the economy."
He said laws
such as AIPPA, BSA and the proposed Interceptions
of Communications Act, entailed huge investments in security
which the country could ill afford.
In apparent
reference to an article authored by the Secretary for Information
and Publicity George Charamba published in The Herald on the same
day, the human rights lawyer dismissed as contradictory the notion
that media freedom was a lesser freedom to national sovereignty.
In his article
Charamba said: "Nowhere in human history has any nation sacrificed
its sovereignty for a lesser freedom, least of all press freedom."
Mafume, however,
said sovereignty was now being defined and strengthened through
guaranteeing and protecting the freedoms of citizens and not necessarily
in terms of geographical confines.
This new definition
of sovereignty is aptly captured by the Universal Declaration on
Human Rights, the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights,
the Banjul Declaration and the Windhoek Declaration, among others,
he said.
"Under
the Banjul Declaration the sovereign people of Africa agreed that
media freedom is a fundamental right. It is therefore nonsensical
to say media freedom is a privilege. It is clear that media freedom
is a higher right and not a privilege."
The issue of
sovereignty, Mafume said, had now transcended borders, and was now
defined in terms of shared values and principles hence the existence
of the Windhoek Declaration and Banjul Declaration, among others.
"Sovereignty
is guaranteed and better strengthened through the enjoyment of greater
freedoms and rights by citizens of any given country," argued
Mafume.
He gave examples
of African countries such as Mali, Uganda, Mozambique, South Africa
and Zambia that had several radio stations as countries that had
embraced the vital role played by a diverse, pluralistic and independent
media without sacrificing their national sovereignties.
"What is
good for a media practitioner in South Africa should therefore be
equally good for a media practitioner in Zimbabwe," he said.
Earlier, scores
of journalists marched through central business district in Harare
carrying placards demanding the repeal of AIPPA and the return of
the banned Daily News, Daily News on Sunday, The Tribune and Weekly
Times.
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