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Govt takes aim at remaining independent media
IRIN News
January 08, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56953
HARARE - There are renewed
fears that the Zimbabwean government is intensifying its campaign
against the few remaining privately owned media organisations in
the wake of severe press criticisms of its human rights violations,
a dismal economic record and President Robert Mugabe's plans to
extend his stay in power by another two years.
The government has stripped
newspaper publisher Trevor Ncube of his Zimbabwean citizenship on
the grounds that he is Zambian, as his father was born there and
later emigrated to Zimbabwe.
Media analysts told IRIN
the Zimbabwean government allegedly wanted to use the citizenship
issue as a means of closing down Ncube's two Zimbabwean newspapers
or hand them to pro-government individuals. "As a media owner
in Zimbabwe, you have to be a Zimbabwean citizen; if you are not,
you cannot own more than 40 percent of a media company," Ncube
said.
According to the analysts,
stripping Ncube of his citizenship could force the country's two
remaining independent weekly newspapers, which Ncube publishes,
The Standard and The Zimbabwe Independent, a business publication,
to close, or enable the authorities to hand control of the newspapers
to people sympathetic to the ruling ZANU-PF party. Ncube also publishes
the South African weekly newspaper, The Mail & Guardian.
Zimbabwe is home to the
descendants of tens of thousands of Zambians, Malawians and Mozambicans
who arrived in the country in the mid-1950s as migrant labourers
during the British colonial Federation of Northern Rhodesia (now
Zambia), Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and Nyasaland (now Malawi),
to work on farms and mines.
The government
contends that Ncube should have renounced his Zambian citizenship
and "regularised" his Zimbabwean status in 2001 after
the Citizenship
Act came into force, barring dual citizenship.
Ncube, a Zimbabwean passport
holder, is contesting the removal of his citizenship in the High
Court, and said he knows no home other than Zimbabwe and all his
actions were in accordance with the new citizenship law.
"I took an oath
before a citizenship officer - that was three years ago. At the
end of the day, one is puzzled and I don't understand what is going
on, and that is when conspiracy theories set in," Ncube told
the Mail & Guardian.
"There is no entitlement
on my part to Zambian citizenship merely because my father was born
there," Ncube said in court papers. "He was a citizen
of Zimbabwe at the time of my birth, as will appear from his national
registration in Zimbabwe."
A high court judge issued
an order against the state in 2006, requiring it to render null
and void the invalidation and withdrawal of Ncube's passport.
In 2003 Zimbabwe's Media
and Information Commission (MIC) banned the country's largest selling
newspaper, The Daily News, and its sister publication, The Daily
News on Sunday, and in 2004 shut down independent newspapers The
Tribune and The Weekly Times, which were also seen as critical of
government policies.
The government has also
used other avenues to muzzle dissenting media: The Daily Mirror,
a privately owned newspaper, was taken over by the Central Intelligence
Organisation (CIO), part of the state security service, while the
Financial Gazette, another weekly newspaper, was also bought out
by the CIO.
Joy TV, the country's
only independent television station, had its licence withdrawn;
radio station Voice of The People had its premises bombed by unknown
assailants and Capital Radio was banned.
The MIC also recently
hiked newspaper registration charges, which could force the few
remaining community newspapers to close if they cannot afford the
fees, media analysts said, and is also threatening to withdraw the
accreditation of freelance journalist Nunurai Jena on the suspicion
that he might be working for Voice of America, the US-based radio
and TV broadcaster, which the authorities have called an anti-government
organisation.
The action against
the publisher has provoked condemnation by The Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists (ZUJ), The World Association of Newspapers,
the World Editors Forum, the Freedom of Expression Institute and
the International Press Institute.
"What this will
do is to bring focus on Zimbabwe again on the issue of press freedom.
The government is always complaining about negative publicity, and
such developments will certainly bring the spotlight on Zimbabwe,"
said ZUJ president Matthew Takaona.
Tafataona Mahoso, chairman of the MIC, which been instrumental in
the closure of independent media organisations, denied that stripping
Ncube of his citizenship would culminate in the closure or seizure
of his newspaper interests.
"The MIC learned
of Ncube's difficulties from the press and has never in any way
been party to this case. We wonder why the publisher [Ncube] would
choose to instigate such a campaign of vilification against the
MIC and the nation," Mahoso said in a statement.
However, the
author of a column published in the state-controlled newspaper,
The Herald, thought to be a senior government official, signed off
by saying, "Trevor [Ncube], best wishes for 2007, the year
of closure."
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