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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Harare
to bar Western media from covering election
ZimOnline
February
04, 2008
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=2645
HARARE – Zimbabwe’s
Information Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu says Harare will not accredit
journalists from "hostile" Western nations to cover next
March’s presidential and parliamentary elections.
Speaking at the
Bulawayo Press Club on Friday night, Ndlovu said journalists from
Western media groups were continuing to violate Zimbabwe’s media
laws by illegally sneaking into the country.
"The government
would limit the accreditation of foreign media houses to only those
with friendly ties with the government," said Ndlovu.
"Journalists
from the likes of BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) who continue
to sneak into the country illegally and report illegally would not
be accredited to cover the elections," added Ndlovu.
Last month, the
BBC’s John Simpson defied the ban on the organization and spent
a week in Zimbabwe covering political developments on the ground
as well as in President Robert Mugabe’s ruling ZANU PF party.
The clandestine
visit riled as well as embarrassed state security agents who keen
to maintain a tight lid on political developments in Zimbabwe.
Zimbabweans go
to the polls on 29 March with Mugabe, who has maintained a tight
grip on information flow over the past five years, seeking a fresh
five-year presidential term that could take his rule to 33 years.
Harare has banned
international media organisations such as the BBC and the United
States’ based Cable News Network (CNN) from operating in Zimbabwe
as the government continued its fierce propaganda war against critics.
Harare has also
since 2003 banned four independent newspapers, including the biggest
selling Daily News, that were deemed critical of the government.
The government
last week said it would only invite election observers from "friendly
nations" to observe the elections that come amid a worsening
economic crisis that has manifested itself in rampant inflation
of over 26 000 percent, shortages of food and foreign currency.
Analysts say free
and fair elections are a prerequisite to any plans to resuscitate
the southern Africa’s once brilliant economy. – ZimOnline
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