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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Two
foreign journalists held in Harare for working without accreditation
Reporters Sans Frontiers
April 04, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=26465
Reporters Without Borders calls for the release of two journalists
working for international news media who have been held since a
police raid yesterday on a Harare hotel being used by the foreign
press.
"Coming amid heightened
tension resulting from the delays in announcing the results of the
29 March general elections, this serious incident is reviving fears
that President Robert Mugabe's supporters and the security
forces could use force to hold on to power," Reporters Without
Borders said.
"The African observers
monitoring the elections process should request the release of the
detained reporters," the press freedom organisation added.
"Those who want to maintain calm in Zimbabwe should understand
that this kind of raid now belongs to the past and that journalists
who were just doing their job should not be in detention."
At around 2 p.m. yesterday,
a Zimbabwean police unit raided the York Lodge, a Harare hotel being
used by several foreign reporters covering the elections. Five journalists
were arrested. Three of them were later released, but two are still
being held at Harare police headquarters. One of them is New York
Times correspondent Barry Bearak.
Their lawyer,
Beatrice Mtetwa, said they would be charged to day with working
without accreditation in violation of a 2002 press law known as
the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, under which journalists
can be sentenced to up to two years in prison for working without
a permit from Media and Information Commission (MIC).
The police also raided
the headquarters of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) yesterday. According to official results, the MDC has won
a majority in the parliament. But the electoral commission had not
yet announced the results of the other elections, including the
presidential election, fueling concern that Mugabe and his party
may refuse to release their hold on power.
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