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Attacks
on the press in 2007: Zimbabwe
Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
February
07, 2008
http://www.cpj.org/attacks07/africa07/zim07.html
It’s the vacuum
that illustrates the problem—all of the reporters who have fled,
the news outlets that have closed, the stories that have gone unreported.
Seven years of government intimidation and deteriorating economic
conditions have prompted a steady flow of Zimbabwean journalists
to leave the country. CPJ has documented at least 48 journalists
as having fled since 2001, although the number is twice that when
data from exile organizations is considered. Those ranks include
many of the nation’s most prominent reporters, constituting the
largest group of exiled journalists in the world, CPJ research shows.
Nyasha Nyakunu,
a research officer for the Media Institute of Southern Africa, said
government harassment had decreased over the past several years
simply because "there are fewer and fewer media workers in
Zimbabwe." But, she said, "the pattern of intolerance
remains unchanged." President Robert Mugabe and his ruling
ZANU-PF party have used a battery of restrictive legislation—most
notably the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) and the
Broadcasting
Services Act—to suppress the few remaining independent media
outlets. No independent dailies have published since the government
forced the Daily News to shut down in 2003. Only four independent
weeklies still circulate—The Standard, The Zimbabwe Independent,
The Zimbabwean, and The Financial Gazette—and no independent domestic
broadcasters have been licensed to operate.
With an official
inflation rate of 7,600 percent (other estimates place it at nearly
double that), four out of five Zimbabweans live below the poverty
line, according to the International Crisis Group, an independent
nonprofit that analyzes potential conflict areas. A military-led
campaign to slash prices instead produced acute food and fuel shortages
in 2007. Few journalists could survive without working for international
news outlets or the Zimbabwean media-in-exile—but those who did
became targets of government attacks.
AIPPA, considered
one of the most repressive media laws in the region, requires all
journalists and media outlets to register with the government-controlled
Media and Information Commission (MIC). In December, parliament
passed a series of largely cosmetic amendments to AIPPA and other
media laws, a move that Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists Vice President Njabulo Ncube likened to
putting "lipstick on a frog." The changes eliminate criminal
penalties for lack of accreditation but leave government controls
firmly in place.
In practice, MIC
grants accreditation selectively based on political considerations,
while using AIPPA as a hammer to attack journalists linked to foreign
or exile media outlets. In April, police arrested Gift Phiri of
the London-based Zimbabwean on charges of practicing journalism
without AIPPA accreditation after he was seen covering an opposition
rally, Rangu Nyamurundira of the Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights told CPJ. Phiri, who was beaten in
police custody, was acquitted in September in a court in the capital,
Harare, according to news reports.
The same law was
used against foreign journalists. The correspondent for South Africa’s
private E.TV, Peter Moyo, was arrested in February and later fined
for filming illegal diamond mining in the eastern region of Manicaland
without AIPPA accreditation. Manicaland Bureau Chief Andrew Neshamba
and cameraman William Gumbo of the state Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
(ZBC) were charged with "criminal abuse of duty" for assisting
Moyo, defense lawyer Victor Mazengero told CPJ. Both ZBC journalists
were suspended without pay and stripped of their media accreditation;
Gumbo went into hiding in fear of further reprisal, according to
local journalists.
Little more than
a month later, Alexander Perry of the U.S. newsmagazine Time was
detained for 48 hours and accused of lacking proper accreditation
while covering a similar story about unregulated gold and diamond
dealers.
The government
had fired a broadside against foreign media in March when it released
a statement threatening correspondents with unspecified reprisals
because of supposed bias. The statement, issued by the Ministry
of Information and Publicity, singled out prominent correspondents
Jan Raath of The Times of London, Peta Thornycroft of Britain’s
Daily Telegraph, and the U.S. government-funded broadcaster Voice
of America for reporting "fabricated stories." Thornycroft,
a veteran Zimbabwe journalist and 2007 International Women’s Media
Foundation award winner, told CPJ that she had applied for AIPPA
accreditation several times, but the government never responded.
Foreign news outlets including the BBC and the South Africa-based
E.TV have either been banned or refused AIPPA accreditation, according
to CPJ research. Only four foreign media companies—Reuters, Agence
France-Presse, Al-Jazeera, and The Associated Press—were based in
Harare in 2007. "All of the correspondents are on a short leash,"
said exiled journalist Wilf Mbanga, editor of The Zimbabwean. "The
correspondents are all nationals so that the government can control
them easier than an international reporter."
One journalist
believed to have leaked explosive footage to foreign media was killed
in mysterious circumstances. Edward Chikomba, a former ZBC cameraman,
was abducted on March 29 near his home in Harare by a group of armed
men and found dead two days later near the industrial farming area
of Darwendale, according to local journalists and news reports.
Those reports and CPJ sources said Chikomba’s death was likely linked
to his alleged leaking of footage showing opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai after he was beaten in police custody in February. The
footage aired on several global media networks and sparked international
condemnation of Mugabe; it was never shown on state television.
The Chikomba murder instilled fear in the local press, especially
in regard to collaborating with foreign media.
In September,
journalists raised concerns about a purported government document
that named 15 independent journalists who were to be "placed
under strict surveillance and taken in." The authenticity of
the list—first published by the South Africa-based news Web site
ZimOnline—was denied by the government, although at least three
of the journalists named had been targets of recent harassment.
They included Bill Saidi, editor of The Standard, who received a
bullet and a handwritten death threat in an envelope delivered to
his office in February.
In a series of
interviews with CPJ, Zimbabwean journalists noted that similar lists,
all with shadowy origins, had circulated in the past. With presidential
and parliamentary elections planned for 2008, some said, government
operatives may be seeking to ratchet up tension in the press. Mugabe,
in power since 1980, was expected to retain office in the March
2008 vote. "There is little hope for the elections to be free
and fair without a free press," said Geoff Nyarota, former
Daily News editor and 2001 CPJ International Press Freedom Award
recipient.
The Associated
Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), publishers of the Daily News and Daily
News on Sunday, continued to pursue a Supreme Court case challenging
AIPPA’s constitutionality. Sikhanysio Ndlovu, head of the Ministry
of Information and Publicity, announced in October that the MIC
had named a board to address ANZ’s application to resume publishing.
The country’s
private broadcasting industry remained virtually nonexistent. State-run
ZBTV proclaimed itself the "station of first choice"—a
laughable claim, since it was the only choice for many viewers.
In March, state media reports said that the Kenya-based Gateway
Communications planned to establish satellite television service
in Harare. Those plans had not reached fruition by late year.
Three independent
radio stations run by exiled journalists sent signals into Zimbabwe
from bases across the globe. They included Studio 7, based in Washington;
SW Radio Africa in London; and Voice
of the People in Cape Town, South Africa. Forced to be innovative
to get around media restrictions, SW Radio Africa began a text-messaging
news service that reached 6,500 subscribers. Studio 7 said it expected
to launch a similar service.
Applicants seeking
domestic radio licenses were ignored or rejected. "Today there
are numerous community radio initiatives that have lobbied unsuccessfully
for the past three or more years for the liberalization of the airwaves,"
said Harare lawyer Chris Mhike in an interview with The Zimbabwe
Independent. "Radio
Dialogue in Bulawayo, for instance, could go on air tomorrow
if the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe ... could wake up from
its slumber and issue broadcasting licenses." Government officials
told a parliamentary hearing in September that their hands were
tied by various Broadcasting Services Act regulations. In October,
Information and Publicity Minister Ndlovu told the government daily
The Herald that he would work to soften Broadcasting Services Act
requirements, and that he would invite new applicants for broadcasting
licenses.
In August, parliament
enacted a sweeping communication surveillance law. The Interception
of Communications Act allows authorities to intercept phone,
Internet, e-mail, and postal communications. Despite the country’s
devastated economy, the government said it plans to establish a
state monitoring center and require telecommunication providers
to install systems "supporting lawful interceptions at all
times," the Media
Institute of Southern Africa reported. Ndlovu told CPJ the surveillance
law will target "imperialist-sponsored journalists with hidden
agendas" and "protect the president, a minister, or any
citizen from harm."
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