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President's
politician nephew warns against formation of independent media
Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA)
January 29, 2007
http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/80731/
On January
26 2007, a leading Zimbabwean politician warned journalists from
forming an independent media council without the approval of the
government, which has closed newspapers and arrested reporters.
Leo Mugabe,
a nephew of President Robert Mugabe and a member of his ruling Zimbabwe
African National Union Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF), told about 200
journalists at a meeting to launch the council that they should
avoid confrontation with the authorities.
The government
introduced tough media laws five years ago, imposing state permits
on local reporters and barring foreign journalists from working
permanently in the country.
The voluntary
media council is a bid to supervise and maintain professional and
ethical conduct among journalists in the face of government charges
that the media is unprofessional.
Zimbabwe's largest
privately owned newspaper, the "Daily News", its sister Sunday paper
and two weeklies were forced to close down after failing to comply
with stringent provisions of the law, while dozens of reporters
have been arrested on charges of violating the regulations.
"As the (parliamentary)
portfolio committee on transport and communications, we support
the idea of a voluntary media council . . . but it should be within
the confines of the law, so that you do not have a structure that
runs parallel to the media and information commission," said Leo
Mugabe.
"What we should
work on are amendments to AIPPA (Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act), so that this
animal you want to create can be accommodated therein," he said.
"There should
be no conflict in the process," he added.
Matthew Takaona,
head of the journalists' union and chairperson of the steering committee
pushing for the media council, had said it would be launched after
outstanding constitutional and structural issues have been addressed.
Iden Wetherell,
chairperson of the Zimbabwe editors' forum, insisted journalists
should not be intimidated by Leo Mugabe and should close ranks.
"We are eager
to broaden participation and engage our colleagues in the state
media . . . as long as we agree on elementary things, such as the
respect for freedom of expression and they should not celebrate
the arrest of fellow journalists," he said.
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