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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Journalist
reported missing as crackdown intensifies against independent press
Reporters Sans Frontiers
April 22, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=26668
Journalist reported missing
as crackdown intensifies against independent press
Reporters Without
Borders today voiced concern about the disappearance on 15 April
of freelance journalist Stanley Karombo, as attacks on and arrests
of reporters continued and the state-run media resumed a propaganda
campaign on behalf of the government.
"Zimbabwean
journalists are being exposed to great danger because of the failure
of the community of African states to put pressure on the government
of Robert Mugabe," the worldwide press freedom organisation
said.
"Without commenting
on the issue of the 29 March general elections, countries which
still have the ear of the outgoing president should at least make
some clear demands, particularly in connection with press freedom.
It is not too late to prevent silence turning into complicity with
tragic acts," it added.
Stanley Karombo was seen
for the last time on 15 April 2008 when he was covering a general
strike called by the main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), of Morgan Tsvangirai. His colleagues have searched
in vain for him at Harare police stations and police have said they
do not know where the journalist is.
Edward Chikomba, a freelance
cameraman and former contributor to public Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation (ZBC), was found dead on 31 March 2007, two days after
he was snatched by unknown kidnappers who were suspected of being
secret service agents.
Freelance journalist,
Frank Chikowore, who also disappeared on 15 April this year from
close to his home, was brought before a Harare court on 21 April,
along with 27 MDC activists, allegedly for disturbing the peace.
He has been accused of involvement in torching a bus, after initially
being wrongly accused of working as a journalist without compulsory
accreditation from the Media and Information Commission (MIC). The
court today decided to remand all of the defendants in custody,
with the aim of deterring any possible troublemakers.
Among the accused is
also Luke Tamborinyoka, former editor of the banned newspaper, The
Daily News, currently the MDC's director of information. He
spent 71 days in custody in 2007, during which he was ill treated,
accused of having thrown a petrol bomb at a police station. He was
finally acquitted and released by a court in the capital.
Elsewhere, Matthew
Takaona, president of the Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists (ZUJ) was clubbed and pistol-whipped by
six soldiers, on 17 April, while he was in a shopping centre in
Chitungwiza, 35 kms from Harare. His personal possessions were stolen.
In the past
few days, monitoring carried out by the independent Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ) showed that news coverage
by public media remained partisan. Its monitoring of prime-time
programmes showed in particular that the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
(ZBC) "maintained its silence on the presidential election
results and even failed to conduct any programmes focusing on the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission's recounting of votes in 23
constituencies (outside its news bulletins)".
The MMPZ also noted that
it broadcast of two songs in support of the presidential party,
Zanu-PF, by singer Elizabeth Chinouriri, who wore a t-shirt printed
with a photo of Robert Mugabe.
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