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MEDIA-AFRICA:
"Threatened from everywhere"
Joyce
Mulama, Inter Press Service (IPS)
August 10, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=34309
NAIROBI - Concerns
about restrictions on press freedom in Africa have surfaced again,
this during a two-day conference held in Kenya that attracted over
100 media representatives from across the continent.
The Aug. 8-9 gathering took place in the capital, Nairobi. It was
organised in part by the United Nations-affiliated University for
Peace.
"The media is threatened from everywhere by draconian laws passed
by parliament, threats from the executive and threats from the judiciary,
which locks up journalists for doing nothing. This is actually judicial
terrorism," Wilfred Kiboro, chief executive officer of the Nation
Media Group, told the meeting. The group is one of Kenya's largest
media organisations.
The situation in Zimbabwe received particular attention.
A controversial law passed in 2002, the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), requires
all journalists and media outlets in the Southern African country
to register with a government-controlled Media and Information Commission.
Failure to do so can earn reporters jail terms of up to two years.
"Since its introduction in 2002, AIPPA has been used to harass dozens
of journalists and to shutter newspapers, including the 'Daily News',
which was Zimbabwe's only independent daily newspaper," notes the
New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in a survey
titled 'Attacks on the Press in 2005'.
Another constraint comes in the form of the Criminal Law (Codification
and Reform) Act, signed into law last year, which makes it an offence
to publish information that proves to be false -- and which is deemed
to promote public disorder in Zimbabwe. The penalty for contravening
this act is a heavy fine, imprisonment of up to 20 years, or both.
The Criminal Law Act also penalises statements about the presidency
that are viewed as abusive and indecent.
Harsh legislation, combined with a state monopoly on broadcasting,
has deprived many Zimbabweans of any independent analysis of events
in their country.
"The country has gone back to re-regulating the media to curtail
freedom of expression and freedom of the press," observed Fackson
Banda, chair of the media and democracy department at Rhodes University
in South Africa, at the Nairobi conference.
In many instances, independent voices have not only been silenced;
persecution has also forced them abroad.
'Attacks on the Press in 2005' states that the "…CPJ's Elisabeth
Witchel found that at least 90 Zimbabwean journalists, including
many of the nation's most prominent reporters, now live in exile
in South Africa, other African nations, the United Kingdom, and
the United States, making it one of the largest groups of exiled
journalists in the world."
Delegates to the conference heard that reporters elsewhere in Africa
are also feeling the heavy hand of government intervention.
"Countries are re-regulating instead of deregulating the media,
and as such press freedom is under fire," said Banda.
This can have dire consequences for the political and economic health
of states.
"There are lots of risks if governments take to regulating the media
too much. There is bound to be lots of mismanagement (and) bad governance
where corruption is never revealed. A lot of bad practices can happen
without control when the media is silenced," Pär Granstedt,
a member of European Parliamentarians for Africa, told IPS.
"Transparency is very important in government dealings, and it can
only be overseen if the media is free. This is where politicians
and the media have to sit together, and ensure that laws that enhance
freedom of the media are in place."
For Mary Karooro Okurut, a member of parliament in Uganda, such
negotiations would best be pursued through having media organisations
join forces -- to press all African countries to pass standard legislation
guaranteeing press freedom.
"We need one umbrella body on the continent that would lobby and
have this matter taken to the African Union, so that similar legislation
about the press is adopted all across (the continent). (It's) not
for each country to take its own stand," she told IPS at the meeting.
"If Africa has to develop, we need a free media -- not in some countries,
but in all countries in Africa."
Okurut's suggestion seems feasible to Desmond Orjiako, the Great
Lakes region communication adviser for the 53-member African Union
(AU).
"If the continental media pressure group is able to present a formidable
case to the AU Heads of State Summit or the Council of Ministers,
then it is possible that the mandate of a free press may be given
across Africa," he said.
The council is made up of foreign affairs ministers of AU states;
it takes decisions on various issues and helps prepare for the annual
summit where the AU Assembly, the highest decision-making body of
the union, convenes.
But, continent-wide legislation for press freedom is likely to be
a tough sell in certain states -- as the CPJ's recent list of the
'10 Most Censored Countries' indicates.
Three African nations -- Equatorial Guinea, Libya and Eritrea --
feature on the list, issued May 2.
While there are a small number of privately-owned newspapers in
Equatorial Guinea, says the CPJ, these seldom publish because of
budgetary and political constraints.
"State-run Radio Malabo broadcasts songs warning citizens that they
will be crushed if they speak against the regime. During parliamentary
elections in 2004, state media called opposition activists 'enemies'
of the state," notes the CPJ. (Malabo is the capital of Equatorial
Guinea.)
"State radio has described Obiang as 'the country's God' who has
all power over men and things," it adds, in reference to President
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.
Libyan media are termed "the most tightly controlled in the Arab
world", with the CPJ noting further that last year's unsolved murder
of journalist Dayf al-Ghazal al-Shuhaibi "has sent an unmistakable
message to would-be critics."
According to the committee, Eritrea has no privately-owned media
whatsoever -- making it unique amongst the countries of sub-Saharan
Africa. Some 15 journalists have been imprisoned in this East African
state for the past five years. (END/2006)
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