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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
unity deal offers media glimmer of hope
Associated Press
October 08, 2008
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/10/08/africa/AF-Zimbabwe-Media.php
Independent Zimbabwean
newspaper editor Davison Maruziva says there's plenty of freedom
of expression in Zimbabwe.
Problem is: "There
is no freedom after expression."
Maruziva will appear
in court next month on charges of publishing "false statements
prejudicial to the state" because of an article written by
an opposition leader that appeared in his weekly, The Standard.
Under Robert Mugabe's
28-year autocratic rule, independent voices like Maruziva's newspaper
— one of three that are not state controlled — have
little space. Printing presses are regularly blown up, foreign news
organizations banned and journalists harassed, beaten and jailed.
One journalist was killed
this year and scores have been arrested.
Hope for change
was raised last month when Mugabe signed a power-sharing agreement
with the opposition to end Zimbabwe's political and economic crisis.
But politicians deadlocked over sharing Cabinet posts have yet to
turn the September agreement into reality.
The accord promises to
open up the airwaves, allowing "as many media houses as possible,"
and calls for public media to provide "balanced and fair"
coverage of all political parties. Currently, there is only one
state-run television station and no independent radio stations.
But many feel the deal
did not go far enough to protect media freedoms and is unlikely
to end the state's propaganda machine.
"There is nothing
to celebrate," said Maruziva.
Media organizations are
calling for repealing all laws that target the media, the withdrawal
of charges against journalists and for the immediate granting of
permission to foreign news organizations to work in the country.
"We were
expecting to see something more radical," said Takura Zhangazha,
director of Zimbabwe's chapter of the Media
Institute of Southern Africa.
Zhangazha said the continued
control of the state media by Mugabe's party will not "build
confidence" in the power-sharing deal.
Iden Wetherell, group
editor of The Standard and its sister paper, the weekly Zimbabwe
Independent, said there is a "hunger for news" in the
country.
His papers offer criticism
of Mugabe and his government not found on air or in the state-controlled
The Herald, the largest national daily. The independent press also
gives space to the opposition and doesn't shy away from detailing
the country's economic decline.
"Our duty, our job
is to tell it as it is. In that situation we do our best,"
Wetherell said.
Running a newspaper in
Zimbabwe, like running any business in a country facing an inflation
rate of about 11 million percent a year, is tough. There is little
advertising to rely on.
The Zimbabwe Independent
costs 3,000 Zimbabwe dollar or between 70 US cents and US$2 depending
on various rates. The Herald hiked its prices this week up from
1,500 Zimbabwe dollars to 3,000.
"Fewer people are
able to read us because of the cost," Wetherell said. He declined
to reveal circulation figures.
The papers comply with
media laws and its small staff of about 20 journalists are officially
accredited. Yet the papers have been charged with numerous infractions.
The Daily News, which
challenged the sweeping media laws in court and refused to register
with the government, was closed down by the government in 2003.
The paper boasted circulation of 800,000 and reached rural communities
in Mugabe's party strongholds and not just an educated urban population
sympathetic to the opposition. Before its closure, it had offices
bombed, staff detained and computers confiscated.
Zimbabwe Information
Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu nonetheless insisted his government was
commitment to a free press.
"I am an ally of
the press. We are proponents of press freedom," he told The
Associated Press on Tuesday. "We are waiting for an all inclusive
government to be in place. You can't just have an agreement and
say that is the law."
He accused the independent
media of bias toward the opposition, while saying the public media
were there to "serve everyone."
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change, which has said it would repeal repressive
media laws if it gained power, has accused the state of jeopardizing
the power-sharing agreement by using the public media to denounce
its rivals.
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