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Between
the lines
IRIN News
January 25, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76420
The Zimbabwean government's
move to ask two independent newspapers it had banned to re-register
is being viewed with much scepticism in local media circles.
The Daily News
and the Daily News on Sunday, both published by Associated Newspapers
of Zimbabwe (ANZ), were shut down by the government-controlled Media
and Information Commission (MIC) in September 2003 after they failed
to register under the controversial Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).
The newspapers had been
critical of the ZANU-PF government. The Daily News, set up in 1999,
was believed to have the biggest circulation in the country - around
100,000 - when it was closed.
Chinondidyachii Mararike,
the chair of a special MIC committee, recently told the official
daily newspaper, the Herald, that they were waiting for ANZ to submit
its application, after being directed to do so by Information Minister
Sikhanyiso Ndlovu.
"We are not there
to ensure that ANZ is not registered, but to make sure that the
application is handled by the special board in a fair and just manner,"
the Herald quoted Mararike as saying.
He said his committee
was not "prejudging the ANZ application for registration as
a mass media service." Various court rulings in the past have
urged the government to reconsider its decision on the ANZ application
to register.
Not
sincere
Takura
Zhangazha, spokesman for the Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA, Zimbabwe chapter) claimed
there was "absolutely no sincerity" on the part of the
government to bring back the ANZ titles as vibrant independent newspapers.
"It's a political
game. There is no way in which the two newspapers are going to be
given back their licences before the elections, as would have been
ideal to ensure balanced and diversified media coverage of the polls,"
Zhangazha told IRIN.
Presidential and parliamentary
elections are scheduled to be held in March 2008, but the opposition
has called for a postponement until June.
Zhangazha said the process
of registering the newspapers would require at least two months
to complete, "but then, that would just be the elementary stage,
considering that the banned papers have a mammoth logistical task
in mobilising resources, recruiting staff, among other requirements,
to ensure a serious media project".
Attempt
at reforms
South African president Thabo Mbeki has been asked by the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) to hold talks
between ZANU-PF and the two factions of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC), in which media reform prior to the
elections has been one of the key issues.
The government has made
some "concessions" during the talks. At the request of
the MDC, amendments to media laws were included; a move observers
said was an attempt by the government to bring credibility to the
elections.
The MIC is to be reconstituted
to include a chairperson and eight members nominated by a parliamentary
committee, rather than a membership put in place by the information
minister.
The amended
Broadcasting Services Act now also provides for parliament to
put forward the names of people to run the Broadcasting Authority
of Zimbabwe (BAZ), which has refused to break the state-controlled
Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation's monopoly of the airwaves since
2000.
Window-dressing
The
Zimbabwe Union
of Journalists (ZUJ) said it would "only believe the government's
overture to bring back the two papers when they hit the streets".
Foster Dongozi, secretary-general
of the ZUJ, told IRIN: "We have watched since 2003, when several
attempts were made by the two papers to resume publication, but
what is clear is that the government has used all its tricks to
ensure that the paper did not renew operations, even when the courts
ruled in favour of ANZ, and that makes us very sceptical."
Dongozi said the "window-dressing
process" of inviting ANZ to apply for an operating licence
was the result of a political process, after pressure had been exerted
during the ongoing talks mediated by the SADC.
The ZUJ was
also disturbed by the apparent preoccupation with the ANZ newspapers,
when two other newspapers had also been banned for allegedly failing
to comply with Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act
(AIPPA) conditions.
The Tribune was closed
in 2004 for its failure to notify the MIC of structural changes
to the paper, while another fledgling newspaper, the Weekly Times,
after becoming increasingly critical of the government, was also
banned for non-compliance.
Lack
of consultation
Journalists
are also sceptical of the government's overtures to bring back the
ANZ newspapers, pointing out that they had not been consulted when
the amendments to the media laws were made. Matthew Takaona, the
ZUJ president, wrote to parliament in December 2007 to complain
about the exclusion of his organisation when the Amendment Bill
was passed.
Although he hailed ZANU-PF
and the MDC for acknowledging flaws in AIPPA during their current
talks, he said the union was "extremely disturbed by the fact
that none of the negotiators saw it fit to consult stakeholders
in order to come up with amendments that are owned by, rather than
imposed on, the media industry".
Takaona complained that
the amendments to the various laws provided for the establishment
of a statutory media council, whose task was to ensure ethical conduct
among media practitioners, despite the fact that the ZUJ's move
to establish a voluntary body had been rejected by the government.
"Statutory regulation of the media has never worked in any
democratic society," he commented.
Under the new
AIPPA the validity of newspaper licences has been extended from
two to five years, but Takaona said there was no need to impose
a limit on the validity of the licence.
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