|
Back to Index
More
journalists arrested as political crisis deepens
Reporters Sans Frontiers
April 16, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=26597
Reporters Without Borders
is deeply concerned about freelance journalist Frank Chikowore,
who was arrested by police near his Harare home yesterday and has
since been held in an unknown location. The organisation also calls
for the release of British journalist Jonathan Clayton, who was
arrested at Joshua Mqabuko Nkomo international airport in Bulawayo
on 9 April.
"As Zimbabwe sinks
deeper into crisis, the authorities are using its Kafkaesque laws
to take radical measures with people they regard as getting in the
way," Reporters Without Borders said. "We are extremely
worried about Chikowore, who has proper press accreditation and
who has nonetheless been virtually kidnapped by the police for no
known reason."
The press freedom organisation
added: "Journalists continue to be arrested under a repressive
2002 press law and we fear even greater dangers for journalists
if the political situation worsens."
The Media
Institute for Southern Africa (MISA), a regional press freedom
organization, said Chikowore was seen for the last time when he
was brought home at 11 a.m. yesterday by four policemen in anti-riot
gear and three plain-clothes police officers. They searched his
home and left with a computer, a recorder and a camera, and with
Chikowore.
Harrison Nkomo, a lawyer
appointed by the MISA to represent Chikowore, has been unable to
find out where he is being held, despite going to Harare police
headquarters three times to ask. "The police deny that they
are holding him and claim they have never seen him," Nkomo
said. "I don't know where he is."
Chikowore used to work
for the now banned Weekly Times, but he has been a freelance journalist
for the past several years and he has accreditation issued by the
Media and Information Commission, an essential requirement for anyone
working as a journalist in Zimbabwe.
Clayton was arrested
at Bulawayo airport on 9 April on the grounds that he tried to enter
Zimbabwe as a tourist. He was brought before a court in Bulawayo
on 14 April. The court is expected to issue a decision in the next
day or so.
Margaret Ann Kriel, 60,
who used to be a journalist with the state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation (ZBC), was released on bail on 12 April after being
held for two days. She has been placed under house arrest pending
a court decision as to whether she is to be charged with working
as a journalist without accreditation. The authorities claimed she
interviewed several people including opposition politicians.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|