THE NGO NETWORK ALLIANCE PROJECT - an online community for Zimbabwean activists  
 View archive by sector
 
 
    HOME THE PROJECT DIRECTORYJOINARCHIVESEARCH E:ACTIVISMBLOGSMSFREEDOM FONELINKS CONTACT US
 

 


Back to Index

Media fails to adequately cover the acquittal of 63 WOZA women
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-35
Monday August 28th 2006 - Sunday September 3rd 2006

THE media’s disturbing failure to report pertinent court cases was illustrated by their failure to adequately cover the acquittal of 63 women arrested in February during the "Bread and Roses" protest organised by Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA). The women were being charged under the Miscellaneous Offences Act on allegations of "acting in a manner… likely to lead to a breach of the peace or to create a nuisance or obstruction".

Apart from the niche market SW Radio Africa (29/8) and ZWNews (1/9), the rest of the monitored media ignored this important news and especially the comments of the magistrate. According to SW Radio Africa, the magistrate ruled that WOZA’s public distribution of roses and singing during their demonstration demanding "affordable food and a dignified life" was not a "nuisance". He criticised the manner in which the police handled the issue saying, "Police are supposed to maintain law and order but they failed to do so and went on a ‘fishing expedition’ to arrest any women in the vicinity of the protest" without using "reasonable doubt in the manner of the arrest and provided no evidence to incriminate the accused".

He added: "It is better to set free a guilty person than to convict an innocent one".

Whereas it has become the norm for the government media to censor cases that reflect badly on government, it is inexplicable for the mainstream private media to ignore such matters, which expose the police’s increasing abuse of power to curtail citizens’ rights on the pretext of enforcing the country’s repressive media and security laws. But despite widespread calls on government to either amend or repeal these abusive laws, The Financial Gazette (31/8) revealed that it won’t budge.

The paper reported that government had extended "indefinitely" the tenure of the Tafataona Mahoso-chaired Media and Information Commission (MIC) on the flimsy grounds that there are still "pending legal issues that needed to be resolved".

Besides demonstrating government’s determination to maintain its stranglehold on the media, the development clearly shows that the composition of MIC is not based on the genuine desire to regulate the media but on personalities that slavishly enforce the country’s tyrannical media laws.

Apart from using bodies such as MIC to silence alternative media, the authorities have also employed unorthodox means to stifle the free flow of information. For instance, this week MMPZ had difficulties accessing Studio 7’s Short Wave frequency due to a droning sound that drowned out some bulletins. The sound is similar to that previously used to jam the station’s Medium Wave broadcasts in June.

Two weeks ago Zimbabwejournalists.com carried an extraordinary report alleging that the jamming machinery was located in Harare’s Hillside suburb. Reportedly, it was "installed by the Chinese and secretly commissioned by President Robert Mugabe in June this year". The jamming station is allegedly "heavily guarded around the clock" by central intelligence agents that "severely" beat up police officers who had gone there to investigate the assault of a civilian by the operatives near the premises.

Visit the MMPZ fact sheet

Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.

TOP