|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Journalists
feel the heat
IRIN
News
June 20, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78862
Zimbabwean journalists
and their families are coming under increasing pressure from security
police and the military as the 27 June presidential election run-off
vote draws closer.
Those reporters still
working for the country's few remaining independent newspapers told
IRIN that in the past two weeks there had been a noticeable increase
in attacks against journalists as well as their families.
Freelance correspondent
Tapiwa Zivira, who has exposed government corruption, recently documented
the politically motivated murder of an opposition activist. Last
week, soon after the story was published, his father was abducted
by ZANU-PF supporters in Bindura, Mashonaland Central Province and
his whereabouts remain unknown.
Zivira told IRIN in an
interview that "As far as I know, my father has never taken
an active interest in politics. I was told by those who witnessed
the abduction that the ZANU-PF [the ruling party until the general
election on 29 March] supporters who took him away accused him of
being an MDC [Movement for Democratic Change] supporter."
He hopes his father will
be found alive. After the interview with IRIN, Zivira left for the
area - a ZANU-PF stronghold - to search for his father, but the
pattern emerging from such abductions is that the person's body
is usually found a few days later, often half-buried in a riverbed
or hidden under bush scrub.
Speaking on condition
that they were not identified, several journalists told IRIN that
they were now being forced underground, fearing for their lives.
"I received a telephone
call from a relative in the security services who told me that he
had been going through a list of journalists who were supposed to
be attacked. On the same list were members of the MDC and civic
society activists. My relative advised me to relocate, and I have
not been home since the beginning of the week," one independent
reporter told IRIN.
Another journalist working
in the private media did the same after being warned by a relative
serving in the army that he was on the wanted list. "I am staying
with a relative where nobody is likely to look for me, in a military
camp," he told IRIN.
With a week to go to
the election, the body count of perceived MDC supporters murdered
since March has reached 70, according to the party.
Pro-democracy campaigner
Lovemore Madhuku told IRIN that the targeting of the media was expected.
"ZANU-PF has decimated the active youth activists and recently
shut down civic society, which concentrated on political and human
rights." Madhuku's parents were recently attacked in their
home at a village in the eastern part of the country by suspected
ZANU-PF supporters.
"The only sector
which remains and continues to expose their [ZANU-PF's] corruption
and acts of brutality is the media, which has remained very active
despite repressive laws regulating the media," he said.
The editor of
The Standard, the country's only remaining independent Sunday newspaper,
Davison Maruziva, has been hauled before the courts for publishing
a letter written
by an opposition politician. Media analysts say the stage is being
set for the closure of its sister publication, The Zimbabwe Independent.
Matthew Takaona,
president of the Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists, which represents the welfare of all journalists
in the country, told IRIN that there was an "unsettling"
upsurge of attacks on journalists and their families ahead of the
election.
"We call on whoever
is behind the attacks on journalists and their relatives to stop
the exercise and allow them to conduct their business without interference.
We are also worried after the arrests and detention of journalists
since the last election in March."
Journalists
seen as anti-government militia
A
government deputy minister recently accused journalists of being
"military commanders of the MDC". Media practitioners
working for the state-controlled media appear to have no such worries.
The state-controlled
daily, The Herald, routinely uses its opinion pages to insult and
attack those perceived as being ZANU-PF detractors: in the 20 June
edition of the newspaper, South Africa's first democratically elected
president, Nelson Mandela, and anti-apartheid stalwart Archbishop
Desmond Tutu were derided as house slaves and instruments of the
West's bidding.
Tutu, a Nobel Peace Prize
laureate, has routinely criticized Mugabe's "dictatorial ways".
Mugabe is also becoming
increasingly isolated from his African peers. According to Angola's
state radio, President Jose Dos Santos, one of Mugabe's staunchest
defenders, rebuked the 84-year-old leader, telling him to "observe
the spirit of tolerance, respect for difference and cease all forms
of intimidation and political violence".
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
|