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Freelance
cameraman found dead two days after being kidnapped outside home
Reporters sans frontières / Reporters Without
Borders
April 05, 2007
Reporters Without
Borders called today for an independent investigation into the death
of freelance cameraman Edward Chikomba, a former employee of the
state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings (ZBH), who was found
dead on 31 March, two days after being kidnapped in Harare by men
suspected of being members of the intelligence services.
"We are
utterly dismayed by this murder, which comes at a critical time
for independent journalists because, after years of harassment,
they are now being subjected to extreme violence," Reporters
Without Borders said.
"This appalling
crime must not go unpunished," the press freedom organisation
continued. "As the police do not have the required credibility
to conduct a serious investigation, we call on those presidents
who still maintain a dialogue with President Robert Mugabe to make
him realise that it would be inexplicable and dangerous if those
who are responsible for Chikomba’s death are not clearly identified
and punished. Only an independent third party is capable of establishing
the facts in Zimbabwe today."
Chikomba, who
also ran a stall outside his home in the working-class suburb of
Glen View, was kidnapped by four men, who stopped and initially
asked if they could buy some beverages. Forced at gunpoint to get
into their white 4WD vehicle, he was found dead at Darwendale (60
km west of Harare) on 31 March. Since then, his body has been at
the morgue in Chinhoyi, 115 km west of the capital.
The Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists (the leading organisation of its kind in Zimbabwe)
quoted one of his relatives as saying he tried to pull Chikomba
back as he was being bundled into the vehicle, but the abductors
hit him with the butts of their guns. The relative said the vehicle
was found at Mapinga, near Banket (80 km west of Harare).
One of Chikomba’s
former colleagues said Chikomba was accused of providing the international
media with video footage showing opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai
with his face badly swollen after being beaten while in custody.
The same source said Chikomba was a supporter of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
A Harare-based
journalist told Reporters Without Borders: "He was undoubtedly
targeted because he was known as a cameraman." After leaving
the production team of "Vision 30," a programme broadcast
by ZBH until 2001, Chikomba continued to work as a freelance cameraman
for individuals or news organisations.
Footage of Tsvangirai
with his battered face as he left a courthouse to go to hospital
was shot by several news media including Mighty Movies Zimbabwe
(Pvt) Ltd, a leading Zimbabwean production company that provided
its footage to foreign TV stations and news agencies.
Many opposition
members, human rights activists and journalists have been arrested
by the intelligence services in similar circumstances in recent
weeks. Gift Phiri, a contributor to the London-based weekly The
Zimbabwean, has been held since 1 April on a charge of practising
journalism illegally.
Luke Tamborinyoka,
the former editor of the now-defunct Daily News, was hospitalised
on the orders of a Harare court on 30 March after losing consciousness
during his trial. He had been badly injured as a result of mistreatment
while in police custody following his arrest along with 34 activists
during a police raid on MDC headquarters on 28 March.
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