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Last independent voice may disappear
Moyiga
Nduru, Inter Press Service (IPS)
January 22, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=36251
JOHANNESBURG
- The last of Zimbabwe's independent media voices would disappear
if the publisher of the country's two remaining private newspapers
loses his Zimbabwean citizenship, warn civil society activists and
journalists.
Trevor Ncube, who owns
a majority share in both the Zimbabwe Independent and the Standard
weeklies, was prevented from renewing his passport in late December
2006. The government of President Robert Mugabe claims he is Zambian
by descent, a charge he denies.
"The two newspapers
are the most authoritative in Zimbabwe in terms of covering the
ruling ZANU-PF," Daniel Molokela, a Zimbabwean lawyer, with
the Johannesburg-based Zimbabwe Combined Civil Society Organisations,
told IPS in an interview.
Mugabe's ZANU-PF, the
Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, has been in power
since independence in 1980. It introduced draconian media laws after
the opposition posed a serious challenge to the government in 2000.
"ZANU-PF is tying
to get rid of Ncube's newspapers in Zimbabwe. They are trying to
push him so that he gets a South African passport. If he does, he
will lose majority shareholding in the papers. Then they will not
be critical of Mugabe," Molokela said.
Zimbabwe does not allow
dual citizenship. And Ncube says he has not acquired a foreign passport.
Defending the
system, the state-appointed Media and Information Commission (MIC),
which is charged with licensing and registering journalists and
media houses, has denied that the government of Zimbabwe is intending
to seize control of Ncube's newspapers.
Ncube lives in South Africa's commercial hub of Johannesburg where
he publishes the weekly, Mail & Guardian publication.
"This is a desperate
attempt to muzzle the media. There are only a few independent publications
in the country. The government wants to make sure that there's no
newspaper that is critical of the Mugabe regime," Frank Chikowore,
a Zimbabwean freelance journalist, told IPS by phone. The Weekly
Times, Chikowore used to work for, was shut down in February 2005,
just seven months after it was launched.
"Ncube is lucky
because he has a big name behind him. If it was some unknown individual
like me, nobody would have heard about the announcement to strip
me of my citizenship," Magugu Nyathi, coordinator of the independent,
Johannesburg-based Cross Border Association of Journalists, said
laughingly in an interview with IPS.
Media watchdogs such
as the International Press Institute and Reporters sans Frontieres
have expressed their concerns about the threat to strip Ncube of
his citizenship.
So have local media groups.
In a statement in December, the South African National Editors'
Forum (Sanef) said it "supports Ncube in his endeavours to
obtain legal redress through the Zimbabwe High Court, but believes
the proper course of action would be for the government to give
him his passport, stop interfering with his freedom of movement
and to leave his papers alone."
Ncube's lawyers have
yet to secure a date for the hearing from a Zimbabwean court.
The Sanef statement,
signed jointly by the organisation's chairwoman Ferial Haffajee
and its media freedom sub-committee convenor Raymond Louw described
the attempt to harass the publisher as "a serious inroad in
what is left of media freedom in Zimbabwe and Ncube's personal freedom."
Only a national can own
a paper under Zimbabwean law. Foreigners are barred from holding
more than a 40-percent share, thus losing editorial control of the
publication.
Ncube's newspapers are
not the first to suffer the wrath of the establishment. In March
2003, the Media and Information Commission (MIC) shut down the Daily
News -- the country's only private daily, which was accused of being
an opposition mouthpiece.
Nyathi believes Ncube
is the victim of a lack of law in Zimbabwe. "We don't have
a proper constitution. We are using the Lancaster House Constitution,
negotiated in London when preparing for independence from white
rule in 1979, to strip Ncube of his citizenship," she said.
Many Zimbabweans believe
that behind the brouhaha over his citizenship is the state's real
dislike of the private media. "Ncube was born in Bulawayo (Zimbabwe's
second city). He grew up in Bulawayo. His father, born in Zambia,
was Zimbabwean,'' Malokela said. "This is not a legal case.
It's a political case."
Ncube's Mail & Guardian,
Jan. 19-25, 2007 issue, has quoted Nigerian writer and Nobel laureate
Wole Soyinka complaining that Mugabe has let Africa down. "He
has become power-intoxicated, he is a liberation fighter whom we
all admired and we held up as a model. He has let us down. He is
obsessed with power, intolerant and despotic," he said.
"I consider him
(to be) no better than Idi Amin (former Ugandan dictator) except
that he is constrained from going the whole hog. The conduct of
Mugabe is a betrayal of what we have fought for on the African continent,"
Soyinka said.
Zimbabwe, with a runaway
inflation of over 1000 percent, used to be the grain basket of southern
Africa. Now more than four million of its estimated 13 million people
depend on food aid, according to the United Nations World Food Programme
(WFP).
Zimbabweans are also
tiring of the long running political crisis, which Mugabe continues
to blame on former colonial power Britain and its white kin settlers
in the country.
"If you
want to be happy forget about people like Mugabe. They will give
you blood pressure for nothing," Malokela said wryly.
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