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Al-Jazeera
to cast fresh eye on Zim
Yolandi
Groenewald, Mail & Guardian (SA)
September
29, 2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=285477&area=/insight/insight__africa/
The Qatar-based
television news station Al-Jazeera has said that it will cover Zimbabwe
"without pre-conceptualised ideas" when it launches its
new 24-hour English-language news and current affairs channel next
month.
One of the station’s
major successes has been getting a licence to open a bureau in Zimbabwe,
where it is illegal to work as a journalist without one.
Al-Jazeera,
which will broadcast on satellite television to African audiences,
will be the first international broadcaster in three years to have
a base in Zimbabwe, after the BBC, Sky and CNN were kicked out of
the country.
Nigel Parsons,
the MD of Al- Jazeera International, said he was not surprised that
the Zimbabwean authorities granted the news channel a licence. "They
may have a lack of trust in the other Western news channels, but
we did not come with that baggage."
Parsons added
that he was very aware of the restraints media workers faced in
Zimbabwe. "I want to make it very clear that we will run the
stories of success, but also be critical of events in the country
if that is needed. We know the rules of engagement."
Former BBC World
Service journalist Farai Sevenzo will be the station’s Zimbabwe
correspondent. As a documentary filmmaker, Sevenzo recorded the
ongoing events in Zimbabwe with a series of personal observations
that began with the award-winning Zimbabwe 2002.
Sevenzo said
he was up for the challenge. While he believed that it would be
naive to think that it would be smooth sailing all the way, he did
not want to go into the country with a "mindfix".
"Zimbabwe
is a massive untold story," he said. "We need to hear
what they are saying."
Apart from Zimbabwe,
the channel will also have bureaus in Nairobi, Cairo, Abidjan and
Johannesburg. In addition, Al-Jazeera International will share the
resources of the station’s bureaus in Chad, Libya, Somalia and Sudan.
Parsons said
the station would provide accurate, impartial and objective news
from a grassroots level for a global audience.
One of the station’s
strengths is that it is very astute in tapping into "views
of the street", he believed. "It is a new brand of journalism
that we are taking into the world."
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