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Arrests
and threats against foreign journalists denounced as "anti-democratic"
Reporters Sans Frontiers
April 08, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=26503
Reporters Without Borders
today criticized the government's rough treatment of foreign journalists
covering the country's disputed elections and deplored the South
Africa deputy foreign minister's accusation that the foreign media
were to blame for Zimbabwe's political instability.
"The backers of
President Robert Mugabe are venting their frustration by arresting
and hounding those they wrongly see as enemies of the country,"
it said. "We do not understand why a South African government
minister is supporting them when they are openly flouting the democratic
principles South Africa supposedly incarnates. 'Silent diplomacy'
must not amount to automatic support."
American reporter Barry
Bearak, of The New York Times, and a British journalist, who have
been held in Harare prison since 3 April, were freed yesterday on
bail of 300 million Zimbabwe dollars (US$10,000 at the official
rate, US$69 on the black market), according to their lawyer, Harrison
Nkomo. He said Bearak, 58, was taken to a clinic to treat "back
injuries suffered in a fall," while the British journalist
was ordered to stay at the British High Commission (embassy).
They were arrested in
a 3 April police raid on the surburban York Lodge hotel, where several
foreign journalists were staying while covering the 29 March elections,
and charged with not having proper accreditation. The attorney-general
dismissed the charges but police refused to free them and the journalists'
lawyers filed an urgent appeal on 5 April.
Two South African technicians
of the firm Globecast, Sipho Maseko and Abdulla Gaibee, who were
installing satellite equipment to transmit TV images, were also
freed yesterday after 10 days in prison charged with "working
as journalists without permission." Maseko, a diabetic, was
hospitalised while in jail. Both were freed on bail of 200 million
Zibabwean dollars each.
Two journalists from
the privately-owned South African station Radio 702, Jean-Jacques
Cornish and Sheldon Morais, were arrested on 4 April as they tried
to enter the country at the Beit Bridge frontier post and their
passports seized. They were interrogated for over three hours and
then sent back to South Africa.
South Africa's deputy
foreign minister, Aziz Pahad, told the diplomatic corps in a speech
on 4 April that foreign media and the international community were
"orchestrating" the destablisation of Zimbabwe and had
unfairly accused Mugabe of wanting to "steal" the elections
by delaying announcement of the results. He said the simultaneous
holding of a presidential and parliamentary vote had simply brought
logistical problems.
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