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State
security agents confiscate receivers
MISA-Zimbabwe
December 07, 2006
Zimbabwe’s security agents reportedly
confiscated short wave radio receivers bought for rural teachers
in Gokwe district in a desperate bid to bar them from listening
to foreign stations that beam into Zimbabwe.
Raymond Majongwe, the secretary-general
of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe told MISA-Zimbabwe on 7 November
2006 that the radios had been confiscated from 17 teachers by persons
who identified themselves as working for the President’s Office.
Majongwe said PTUZ bought the shortwave
radio receivers for teachers in the area to enable them to keep
abreast with developments in the country because of the poor television
and radio signals of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings’ broadcasts.
He said the agents, suspected to be
members of the Central Intelligence Organisation, confiscated the
radios because they were brought into the country illegally. Majongwe
said the radios were bought in Harare adding that PTUZ can easily
present the receipts in question.
"I am told the radios were taken
by people who identified themselves as coming from the President’s
Office. We have their names but I cannot disclose any further details
as we have handed the matter to the Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights who are looking into the issue so that
we can recover them.
"We are quite disturbed by these
actions which infringe on the property rights of the citizens over
their rightful ownership to property," said Majongwe.
These latest developments come in the
wake of the constant jamming of the Voice of America’s Studio 7
and SW Radio Africa which broadcast on short wave from Washington
DC and London respectively. The radio stations are manned by Zimbabwean
journalists exiled in the United States and United Kingdom and serve
as alternative channels of information to the state-controlled Zimbabwe
Broadcasting Holdings.
Zimbabwean listeners and viewers tune
into foreign television and radio stations in Botswana, South Africa,
Zambia and Mozambique owing to the poor transmission signals and
poor quality programming by ZBH.
Due to lack of transmission sites and
depleted stations, only 30 percent of the country receives radio
and television coverage from the state-controlled broadcaster while
the other 70 percent relies on foreign stations.
Alfred Mandere the chief executive
officer of Transmedia Corporation, the sole national signal carrier
operator, is on record confirming the possibility of imminent broadcast
blackouts. "The equipment is now old and definitely a transmission
blackout for both television and radio is inevitable, it’s more
like an old car that now needs to be replaced," said Mandere.
"Government must do something
fast because eventually the blackout will dawn. There is need for
national investment in the radio and television sector."
Transmedia has made an appeal for US$
64 million to the government for the acquisition of new equipment
from China, South Africa and Europe as part of its National Grand
Plan aimed at replacing the existing 40-year old equipment and improve
transmission coverage.
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