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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Letter
to UN envoy on eve of departure for Zimbabwe
Reporters Sans Frontieres
June 13, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=27478
Reporters Without
Borders wrote today to United Nations Assistant Secretary-General
Haile Menkerios asking him to take account of the current climate
of fear for the independent media in Zimbabwe when he arrives in
Harare for talks with the government next week. Here is the text
of the letter.
Mr. Haile Menkerios
Assistant Secretary-General for Political Affairs
Department of Political Affairs
Room 3570A
United Nations
New York NY 10017
Paris, 13 June
2008
Dear Mr. Menkerios
In view of your
intention to visit Harare from 16 to 20 June, ahead of the 27 June
presidential election run-off, Reporters Without Borders would like
to brief you about the government's serious press freedom violations
and the climate of fear reigning among journalists and human rights
activists.
The election
campaign and first round of the presidential election on 29 March
were disastrous for press freedom. Eighteen journalists and media
assistants were arrested. The climate has worsened since then, especially
in recent weeks, with the authorities now using independence war
veterans as a supplementary force for the security services. Our
organization is very concerned that the decisive second round will
be the occasion for a further escalation in the repression.
The campaign
of intimidation and harassment of journalists has been stepped up
in the approach to the second round. Each week, our organization
and local press freedom NGOs have registered cases of journalists
being arrested arbitrarily or placed in custody for no reason, which
is reinforcing the climate of fear and self-censorship. There have
also been police raids on news media and independent organizations,
and journalists have been unfairly dismissed from state-owned media.
Journalists
have not been the only victims of this campaign. The Zimbabwean
authorities have violated their commitments by stepping up physical
attacks and arrests involving the opposition, including its leaders,
preventing the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which was ahead
in the first round, from campaigning freely.
Human rights
activists have also been targeted. Abel Chikomo, for example, the
head of Zimbabwe
Human Rights Forum (ZHF) and a member of the Media
Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ), was arrested during a
police swoop on the MMPZ office in the western town of Binga on
7 June. Thirteen other people were arrested at the same time for
holding an unauthorised public meeting. They were released without
charge four days later.
Christian Alliance
news director Pius Wakatama and nine other members of religious
organisations were arrested in a raid carried out on an ecumenical
centre in Harare on 9 June by members of a military security unit
and the Criminal Investigation Department. Wakatama, a journalist
who used to work for The Standard, an independent weekly, and the
Daily News, was finally released on the evening of the same day
without being charged.
The authorities
carried out a radical screening of journalists authorized to cover
the elections, in violation of international conventions signed
by Zimbabwe, while the foreign media and their local employees are
kept under constant surveillance, resulting in arrests and heavy
sentences. Bernet Hasani Sono, Resemate Boy Chauke and Simon Maodi
were stopped by police on 23 May as they were transporting
equipment belonging to the British TV station Sky News and were
given six-month prison sentences on 2 June for "unauthorized
possession of TV broadcast equipment."
The government
has also stepped up its restrictions on news entering the country
from abroad. A tax of 40 per cent of the total cost per kilogram
was imposed on imported print media a week ago with the aim limiting
the circulation of foreign newspapers and magazines, and publications
produced by Zimbabwean journalists in exile.
Zimbabwe's privately-owned
press has been stifled and reduced to a handful of closely-watched
publications, while journalists employed by the state media are
punished if they do not contribute to government propaganda. The
state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) fired
seven reporters and news editors without explanation on 3 June.
Internal sources said ZBC's new editor in chief, an independence
war veteran, accused them of giving too much air time to the main
opposition party, the MDC.
The behaviour
of the government and its allies is making it very likely that the
election results will be completely fraudulent. We think it is important
that you should remind President Robert Mugabe that his government
is guilty of repeated violations of the treaties and conventions
that it signed.
In 2004, for
example, Zimbabwe agreed to comply with the Southern African Development
Community's "Principles and Rules Governing Democratic Elections,"
which require member states to guarantee "total access to national
and international media" during elections. Zimbabwe's legislation,
which is among the most repressive in the world towards the media,
has flagrantly violated this principle for years.
We hope that
our information and proposal will be of use to your in your visit.
Sincerely,
Robert Ménard
Secretary-General
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