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MIC
allegations against the Media Alliance of Zimbabwe (MAZ)
Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-39
Monday September 25th 2006 - Sunday October 1st 2006
MMPZ is obliged
to dismiss the allegations made by the government-appointed Media
and Information Commission against the Media Alliance of Zimbabwe
(MAZ) during the week as entirely false and a dishonest distortion
of an open and legitimate intention. The attack came almost as a
response to an invitation to the commission’s chairman, Dr Tafataona
Mahoso, to attend a media law reform workshop organized by the Alliance,
which comprises the Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists, MISA
and MMPZ.
The Herald (29/9)
and ZBH radios (29/9, 7 & 8am) reported the MIC attacking the
three civic organisations for "portraying themselves
to their foreign donors as ‘regime change activists’" who
would repeal AIPPA
and POSA
by "clandestinely" convening "conferences
under the guise of media law reform".
Without challenging
these claims or discussing the purpose of the workshop, these media
allowed the MIC to vilify the organisations without question, claiming
that the workshop was a "foreign-sponsored propaganda
exercise" whose "real purpose" was
to "create a stilted platform from which the activists
may engage in an orgy of anti-Zimbabwe diatribe intended to coincide
with other recently staged events". This was apparently
a reference to the abortive protests staged by the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions the previous week.
The Herald did
carry a comment by ZUJ chairman, Mathew Takaona, denying that his
organisation was involved in any "clandestine"
activities at the end of the article but claimed it could not
obtain comment from MISA. No effort was made to seek comment from
MMPZ.
A more detailed
response to the allegations appeared in the online news portal,
The Zimbabwe Situation (1/10). In an IFEX report, the portal quoted
MISA dismissing the commission’s allegations, saying that contrary
to its claims that MAZ had "deliberately excluded key
stakeholders" such as the ministries of information
and justice, MAZ had actually invited "well in advance"
Acting Information Minister Paul Mangwana, as well as the MIC
itself.
MMPZ endorses
these observations that clearly demonstrate there could not have
been anything remotely "clandestine"
about the workshop, which was actually held to discuss the state
of media law in Zimbabwe with members of the Parliamentary Portfolio
Committee on Transport and Communications. Eight members of the
PPC attended the meeting, including its chairman, Leo Mugabe, together
with several representatives from civil society from around the
country.
Clearly, the deliberate
distortion of the truth and the hypocrisy expressed in the MIC statement
demonstrates the depths of dishonesty the institution is prepared
to employ in order to defend its intolerance of any debate about
the need to encourage media development by repealing draconian laws
that throttle the free flow of information.
It is regrettable
that a government institution so cynically distorts constructive
efforts by civil society to engage the authorities in a debate about
the need for media law reform.
In another development
during the week, SW Radio Africa (4/10) reported that state security
agents had raided the Zimbabwe distribution office of the UK-based
Zimbabwean newspaper. The paper’s publisher Wilf Mbanga told the
station that four detectives visited the premises of the distributor
inquiring how the paper was brought into the country and whether
duty had been paid for it. Reportedly, the detectives seized some
documents relating to the paper’s distribution.
Visit the MMPZ
fact
sheet
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