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Government's
censure of Zvayi's deportation unsavory
Extracted
from Media Update 2008/22
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
August 10, 2008
MMPZ notes with
interest government's uncharacteristic defence of Press freedom
following the recent deportation
of Caesar Zvayi, a former political editor with the government-controlled
daily, The Herald, by the Botswana authorities.
Both public and private
media reports cited Information and Publicity Secretary George Charamba
decrying the deportation of Zvayi, saying it was illegal and uncalled
for.
Zvayi, who had become
a media lecturer at the University of Botswana, was a leading propagandist
for President Mugabe's ZANU PF government during his stay
at The Herald and churned virulent hate campaign against government's
opponents, especially the MDC.
He was recently added
to the European Union blacklist for purveying hate speech. The Zimbabwe
Times (14/8) cited an entry against his name on the EU sanctions
list, which said the former Herald staffer "whipped up the
terror campaign before and during (the June 27 presidential run-off)
elections".
Media reports cited a
deportation document allegedly signed by Botswana President, Ian
Khama, describing the Zimbabwean journalist as an 'undesirable'
and 'unacceptable' element in Botswana society.
However, it is Charamba's
unusual swiftness in condemning Zvayi's deportation while
turning a blind eye to similar attacks on journalists working in
the country by the government he serves that undermines the sincerity
of his concern over issues of media freedom.
Until then,
the Zimbabwean government has been notorious for trampling on media
freedoms, enacting hostile tough media laws such as the Access
to Information and (Protection) of Privacy Act to stifle media
development. This includes arrests, harassments and deportation
of foreign journalists working in the country on spurious grounds.
This ultimate
irony however, was Charamba's denunciation of local media
watchdogs such as the Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists (ZUJ) and the local chapter of the Media
Institute for Southern Africa (MISA) for their apparent reticence
over Zvayi's deportation.
For example, ZTV and
Spot FM (11/8, 8pm) reported Charamba expressing "shock at
the deafening silence by the journalist fraternity and the failure
to support and defend their colleague in the difficult circumstances".
ZTV quoted him: "No
one in the (media) industry, not even MISA, loud-mouthed MISA; not
even the media council; not even ZUJ has opened its mouth in defence
of this person (Zvayi)."
No comment was sought
from these organisations.
But while Charamba pontificated
about Zvayi on ZTV, describing him as a "fearless" and
"true patriot" who "defended the interests of
this country", he strangely showed no empathy for award winning
photojournalist Tsvangirai Mukwazhi, who was recently forced to
relocate to South Africa following systematic harassment by the
police.
Reportedly, Mkwazhi finally
decided to flee his home country after police seized his car while
on an assignment and then raided his home, assaulted and arrested
him.
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